Calcium sulfide is a salt.
Neither, because it a salt of strong base(Calcium) and strong acid(Chloric acid)
It's a salt.
The name of the salt produced by the reaction of calcium hydroxide and sulfuric acid is B Calcium Sulfate.
Ca(CH3COO)2Neutral as the is the calcium salt of acetic acid.
Calcium Chloride is neither acid nor base. It is a neutral salt.
Ammonia, NH3 is a weak base in solution. Can pick up a proton.
Neither, because it a salt of strong base(Calcium) and strong acid(Chloric acid)
salt
It's a salt.
The name of the salt produced by the reaction of calcium hydroxide and sulfuric acid is B Calcium Sulfate.
Ca(CH3COO)2Neutral as the is the calcium salt of acetic acid.
Calcium Chloride is neither acid nor base. It is a neutral salt.
Silver sulfide is composed of silver, a metal, and sulfur, a non-metal; therefore, it is an ionic compound and a salt.
CaSO4 is neather acid or base it is a salt which means it is nutreal.
Calcium+hydrochloric acid = calcium chloride+ hydrogen the base for any equation is metal+acid=hydrogen+salt
No, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is the calcium salt of carbonic acid (H2CO3). If a compound has the name of a metal in it (sodium, calcium, copper, etc) it is generally not an acid but a salt. A salt is formed when a metal ion or other positive ion takes the place of hydrogen in an acid.
Calcium carbonate is an alkali salt. Alkali salts are bases, and are formed from the neutralization reaction between a strong base and a weak acid. For example: Ca(OH)2 + H2CO3 --> CaCO3 + H2O strong base + weak acid ---> alkali salt + water