Oxide is not the name of ONE material; there are LOTS of different materials called oxides. Basically, any molecule that has at least one oxygen and one non-oxygen atom could qualify as an oxide.
yes dilute hydrochloric oxide is a strong acid
Sodium oxide is a basic oxide. It reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base.
Nitrogen oxide is not considered an acid because it does not dissociate in water.
Oxide, O2-, and hydroxide, OH- .
No, Na2O is a basic oxide. It reacts with water to form a strong base, sodium hydroxide.
NaOH is formed then. NaOH is a strong base.
Oxide, O2-, and hydroxide, OH- .
No, it is not , but on strong heating it forms oxide in air.
Potassium oxide is a strongly basic oxide:K2O + 2 H+ ----> 2 K+ + H2O
Yes, rubidium oxide is soluble in water and it forms a strong alkaline solution due to the formation of rubidium hydroxide.
No Potassium oxide is extremely basic (alkaline).
calcium oxide (solid crystals at room temperature) is a strong alkali, and anything acidic in the right quantity will neutralise it.