An ammonia solution is alkaline.
I give an example for ammonium salt ....hmm.... lets just take ammonium chloride as an example . How about alkali ? I take calcium hydroxide as an example for alkali . Calcium hydroxide is formed when calcium oxide reacts with water whereas ammonium chloride is formed when hydrochloric acid reacts with ammonia solution . Calcium hydroxide (alkali) + ammonium chloride (ammonium salt) --> calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water .
Hydrochloric acid neutralises ammonium hydroxide to make ammonium chloride.
NH4Cl is ammonium chloride. It is the product of an acid-base reaction between ammonia and hydrochloric acid. It is mildly acidic.
No it is not. Examples of Acids, Bases, Alkali and Salt. Hydrochloric Acid is an Acid. All Acids end with the word "Acid" Copper (II) Oxide is a base. All bases end with the word "Oxide" Copper (II) Hydroxide is an Alkali. All Alkali end with the word "Hydroxide". An alkali is basically a soluble base. The rest would be salts. In this case, Ammonium Chloride is a salt.
alkali
Ammonium hydroxide is an alkali because it gives OH- ions in water and gives a salt on reaction with an acid.
Ammonium chloride is a mildly acidic salt.
ammonium on it's own is a base and chlorine is not an acid. so i think ammonium chloride is a base.
No.
Ammonium Chloride is a salt.It is an acidic salt.
Nitric Acid is used to make Ammonium Nitrate
Dissolve the ammonia in water to produce ammonium hydroxide then add hydrochloric acid to this to form ammonium chloride.