the water can be removed heating the anhydrous.
You can add heat to it. If you grind it up and then put it on a hot plate or a lab burner, the waters will eventually go off. You just dont want to burn the hydrate.
Evaporation by heating is used to remove water from a salt solution, leaving the salt crystals behind.
The answer is 10 moles water.
Magnesium sulfate by itself is not a hydrate.A hydrate has water in it. Magnesium only have magnesium, sulfur, and oxygen. Added with water, it is considered as a hydrate. The most common one is heptahydrate epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O).
A anhydrous ionic compound does not contain water. It is the dehydrated form of a hydrate.
The difference between the hydrate and the anhydrate is 0.624g. Dividing this by the total hydrate mass gives you 0.624/1.632=0.382, which is about 38.2%.
a solid compound which contains water molecules in its crystalline structure
yes you can u could say u need water to hydrate
hydrateA solid compound that contains water molecules is called a hydrate. The stability of a hydrate depends on the nature, temperature, and relative humidity of the compounds.
The answer is 10 moles water.
The answer is 10 moles water.
When a hydrate is heated, the water, h20 is evaporated, leaving only the anhydrous salt. If you add water to a anhydrous salt, it will transition back into a hydrate.
The formula name of a hydrate barium chloride and water is : BaCI2.2H2O
Use the water to give yourself enema. This will at least hydrate your intestines.
By heating water is deleted.
no
there are water molecules in it
Give it water.
The same way you would hydrate anything... Add Water (Warm Preferably)