ionic compounds
Salts have an ionic bound.
No
Salt has an ionic bond, not a hydrogen bond.
yes?
Salts are ionic compounds. Ionic compounds are bonded by electrostatic forces. Water is very good at stabilizing these charge differences which is why salts dissolve in water. Common salts include sodium chloride (NaCl), calcium bromide (CaBr2), which are metal halide salts. There are also many organic salts, such as sodium acetate (NaCH3COO), and nitrogenous salts, such as ammonium chloride (NH4Cl). Salts are solid at room temperature and typically have very high melting and boiling points.
No, SH is not a nitrate. It typically refers to "sulfhydryl" or "thiol" functional groups in chemistry, which contain a sulfur atom bonded to a hydrogen atom. Nitrate compounds contain nitrogen and oxygen atoms bonded together, such as nitric acid (HNO3) or nitrate salts.
Mucus is a mixture of water, glycoproteins, salts, and cells. It is not a compound because it is made up of different substances that are not chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio.
The -ate suffix in chemistry nomenclature indicates that the compound contains oxygen atoms bonded to another element. It is commonly used in naming salts and esters.
Ionic bond is present is salt. sodium and Chloride are ionically bonded to form Sodium chloride. Sodium is positively charged , While chlorine is negative charge
Various salts are added to the mix:Copper salts - blueStrontium salts - redSodium salts - yellowBarium salts - greenCalcium salts - orangeCobalt salts - blueCryolite - yellowLithium salts - bright red
- carbonates are salts.- oxides are...oxides not salts- hydrogencarbonates are salts
They are ionic salts.