By considering the valency of sulfate over phosphate, sulfate can be distinguished from phosphate. Sulfate has a valency of 2 where phosphate has 3.
2Fe(PO4)+3Na2(SO4)->1Fe3(SO4)2+2Na3(PO4)
Copper salts are salts of copper as chlorides, sulfate, phosphate, nitrate, acetate etc.
The chemical name of Ti2(SO4)3 is titanium (III) sulfate or titanous sulfate.
They can actually elute in either order. It depends on your mobile phase. In a weakly basic solution, the phosphate ions are found more as HPO4 (2-) rather than PO4 (3-) and thus will elute before sulfate which is larger and has the same charge. In a strongly basic mobile phase, the PO4 (3-) ion will dominate, and will elute after the sulfate ion
Calcium sulfate plus aluminum phosphate (3 CaSO4 + 2 AlPO4)
No. Phosphates and sulfates are two different things. Phosphate, PO4^3- is an oxyanion of phosphorus while sulfate SO4^2- is an oxyanion of sulfur.
Potassium sulfate is not a phosphate.
The insoluble zinc phosphate is formed.
The formed copper(II) phosphate is insoluble in water.
For example a sulfate.
2Fe(PO4)+3Na2(SO4)->1Fe3(SO4)2+2Na3(PO4)
Na3PO4 and CuSO4
Laboratory reagent consisting of potassium phosphate and calcium phosphate, magnesium sulfate, and ammonium tartrate in distilled water
Copper salts are salts of copper as chlorides, sulfate, phosphate, nitrate, acetate etc.
The chemical name of Ti2(SO4)3 is titanium (III) sulfate or titanous sulfate.
Al3 --> aluminum ion HPO4 2- --> hydrogen phosphate ion v^_^
sodium, potassium, chloride, calcium, magnesium, bicarbonate, phosphate, and sulfate