Either ya taste it or ya magnify it cuz it's a cube.
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1. After the taste.
2. After the products of some chemical reactions.
3. After a crystallographic study.
4. After a chemical analysis.
- after color, odor and general aspect
- by chemical analysis
- studying chemical reactions of this salt
- by microscopic examination of the crystals
- by thermogravimetric study
- measuring some physical parameters as refractive index, lattice parameter, melting point etc.
Zinc salts
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
- salts are ionic compounds - salts are products of neutralization reactions
salts of strong acid and strong base do not undergo hydrolysis
Some salts are shiny.
This question needs to reworded, it makes no sense as written. Perhaps the question is supposed to be "how do you identify soluble and insoluble salts"?
Examples: uranyl nitrate, sodium acetate, copper chloride.
Various salts are added to the mix:Copper salts - blueStrontium salts - redSodium salts - yellowBarium salts - greenCalcium salts - orangeCobalt salts - blueCryolite - yellowLithium salts - bright red
i'm no chemist .. but u could maybe add some kind of alkali and see if u can identify the resulting salts ? ..
- carbonates are salts.- oxides are...oxides not salts- hydrogencarbonates are salts
They are ionic salts.
Radioisotopes are not salts but salts may contain radioisotopes.
Examples: organic or inorganic salts, basic or acidic salts, natural or artificial salts etc.
This is a mixture of salts.
bath salts
Zinc salts
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.