They will dissolve if you put them in the right acids
Not in water.
But they dissolve in acids.
No, iron filings are not soluble in water.
Insoluble, but they will react and the reactant products are partially soluble.
They are insoluble. If iron were soluble, imagine all the cars and bridges dissolving in the rain!
No
Iron (III) acetate is not soluble in water.
Materials like salt and sugar will dissolve in the water and are called soluble as they dissolve completely in the water, where as substances that do not dissolve in water like sand are called insoluble materials.
Iron (III) sulfide is not soluble in water.
No, it is insoluble. It forms as a precipitate.
What is similar about soluble and insoluble.
Iron (III) acetate is not soluble in water.
Neither, it isn't soluble.
no because it is a metal and solid ps u can go and suck on some
Materials like salt and sugar will dissolve in the water and are called soluble as they dissolve completely in the water, where as substances that do not dissolve in water like sand are called insoluble materials.
Iron (III) sulfide is not soluble in water.
No, it is insoluble. It forms as a precipitate.
Iron oxide is only soluble when placed in concentrated mineral acids. It is insoluble in organic and water based solvents.
What is similar about soluble and insoluble.
it is both soluble and insoluble
INSOLUBLE
Insoluble
It is insoluble in water but soluble in hydrofluoric acid.