By the reaction of some metals with acids salts are obtained.
A very simple method is the reaction between a metal and an acid.
Coloured salts generally have a cation which is a transition metal. Iron, Chromium, Manganese, Vanadium and Copper all are examples of transition metals that make colourful salts. Notice that there are exceptions - particularly the period 6 main group metals like lead share some of the properties of the transition group metals and can make colourful salts - the bright yellow precipitate of lead iodide (PbI) is an example commonly used as demonstration of precipitation reactions.
No. Metals react with nonmetals or acids to produce salts. Salts can also form when acids react with bases.
No. These are not heavy metals. They are salts of non heavy metals.
When dilute acids and metals are mixed you will get Hydrogen gas and salts
Metals forms several compounds under various conditions. They will form metallic salts. They will also form alloys when combined with other metals.
Yes, when the cation is ammonium (NH4)+.
All types of metals form salts.
All metals form salts.
All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
Halogens are highly reactive and readily form salts with metals.
Lead is a metal. Metals react with acids to form salts. Metals can be used to make alkalies, but not acids.
Metals form salts often.
Those salts which can dissolve in water.because water is a solvent and salts are solute.
Halogens are not salts but they are chemical elements; halogens can form salts reacting with metals.
Aluminum and magnesium are the two metals in greatest volume that are produced by electrolyzing their molten salts.
Blood contain - as traces - organic salts of metals (Na, Fe, Cu, Zn etc.).
Metals and ammonium form generally salts.