Ammonium Hydroxide is used in commercial cleaning products.
Ammonium Hydroxide
No, ammonium hydroxide is a base.
No: Ammonium is a polyvalent cation that is not usually considered either an acid or a base. Ammonium hydroxide is a base that produces ammonium salts of the anions of an acid with which the ammonium hydroxide reacts.
When ammonium hydroxide decomposes, its ions are changed into two compounds. These two compounds are the same that ammonium hydroxide is formed from. Thus, ammonium hydroxide decomposes into water and ammonia.
Hydrochloric acid neutralises ammonium hydroxide to make ammonium chloride.
A common concentration of ammonium hydroxide solution is 25 %.
The elements in ammonium hydroxide are nitrogen, hydrogen and oxygen.
Ammonium Hydroxide is available as a dilute solution - yes.
Ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) is not organic; it does not contain carbon at all.
Ammonium hydroxide and nitric acid yield ammonium nitrate and water.
Yes, ammonium hydroxide contains nitrogen as part of its polyatomic cation, ammonium, with formula NH4+1.
if the ion that is already with the hydroxide is stronger which is general the case, ammonium hydroxide and a metal sulfate will me formed.