Yes. Pure potassium will blow up in water. In old school houses, teachers experimented with kids. They used pure potassium cubes.
Potassium is soluble in water but not in organic solvents.
Potassium bromide is a salt, soluble in water, made up of two ions: K+ and Br-
The solubility of potassium dichromate in water is 4.9 g/100 ml (0°C)
When potassium oxide is dissolved in water it forms potassium hydroxide.
Potassium oxide(K2O) + water(H2O) --> potassium hydroxide(2KOH)
Yes, potassium is a metal. But the real question is what makes it a metal. Now that's something to think about. Potassium is also very reactive with oxygen, mainly water. do not try it but placing potassium in a tank water can make the tank of water blow up
It depends on what chemicals they are. When water and pure potassium react, they blow up. When magnesium is place over fire, it begins sparking and glows brightly.
It has potassium ions... an ion is what fills the highest occupied energy level... if it were just potassium atoms, u would blow up when you eat bananas... once the potassium bonds with another element it becomes stable
Either.
The Romans dug a right angle in the mountain then they dumped a whole bunch of water in and the pressure of the water hitting the angle made it blow up.
water in potassium shannel
Potassium is soluble in water but not in organic solvents.
Potassium bromide is a salt, soluble in water, made up of two ions: K+ and Br-
The solubility of potassium dichromate in water is 4.9 g/100 ml (0°C)
You would blow up from water pressure.
Hydrodynamics are water dynamites: you use it to blow things up using water. Aerodynamics are air explosives: you use it to blow things up using air.
Potassium oxide(K2O) + water(H2O) --> potassium hydroxide(2KOH)