yes
orange
250mg
The orange has potassium,calcium,phosphorus vitamin d and vitamin e
25 g
Approx. 170 mg K/100 g orange (with peel).
For the same serving size, the milk in my fridge has 510 mg and my orange juice has 430 mg. My milk has slightly more potassium. This may vary from brand to brand, but it seems that milk and orange juice have relatively similar amounts of potassium.
The chemical name is, potassium dichromate. It is orange in colour. Dichromate ion gives colour for this compound.
Potassium dichromate is orange and when it reacts with ethanol which is a primary alcohol it is going to oxidise it to form aldehyde which is colorless. so the color change is from Orange to Colorless. :)
Bromine is solution is orange/red depending on how dilute it is. Potassium permanganate solutions are purple.
Element: oxygen, potassium Compound: sodium chloride, potassium dichromate Mixture: air, orange juice
The orange color of potassium dichromate is caused by the movement of an electron to a vacant d-orbital in the manganese atom. The transition occurs when the chemical is in the presence of light. This is confirmed by the empty 3d-orbital in chromium.
Probably the most well known, bananas are an excellent source of potassium. However potassium can also be found in orange juice, fish, nuts, beans, and chocolate.