Many salts are also ionic compounds.
No, they only "breathe" oxygen that is dissolved in the water. They in no way break apart water molecules.
Ionic compounds produce electrolytes; covalent compounds not.
They produce an oxidation reaction. The reaction in turn produces sulfur, which is sometimes used as a drying agent to compounds.
Chemical elements are combined to produce chemical compounds.
The nonmetal carbon forms the basis of life. The carbon compounds made by living things are said to be organic. Organic compounds not only contain carbon, but also hydrogen. The most common elements found in living things are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur. All of these elements combine in various ways to produce thousands of organic compounds. The study of the chemistry of living things is called biochemistry.
Because the chloride stole one of its electrons for its own negative charge when it dissolved, leaving the hydrogen with a positive charge. It's the most stable situation for those particles.
Hydrogen ions.
Those compounds produce hydrogen (gas)
Arrhenius bases produce OH- ions by definition when dissolved in water. A Bronsted - Lowry base can produce OH- ions, but only has to produce a proton accepting group by definition. A Lewis base is defined as an electron donating group, which hydroxide ion is. So, basic compounds do produce OH- ions when dissolved in water, but not in all cases.
It can dissociate to produce hydrogen ions when dissolved in water.
A salt
Those compounds produce hydrogen (gas).
Salts produce (metallic) positive catIONS and negative anIONS (of non-metals)
Hydrogen is most commonly used commercially to produce hydrocarbons organic compounds such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH).
Substances that form ions when dissolved in water are electrolytes.
Calcium and Hydroxide (1 Oxygen atom+1 Hydrogen atom)
No, they only "breathe" oxygen that is dissolved in the water. They in no way break apart water molecules.