"hydroxide" is a term for an ion. Ions do not inherently belong to any particular phase. You have to specify which kind of molecule the hydroxide belongs to before a valid answer can be provided.
1.HCl is a gas. 2.it is dissolved in water that's why we see it in liquid state. 3.otherwise it will escape that's why it is dissolved in water.
I assume you mean hydrochloric acid and this is a liquid and it is so in a solution.
Hydrogen chloride is a gas.
Hydrochloric acid is a liquid. Hydrochloride isn't anything.
liquid
No, ammonium hydroxide is highly volatile and gives out ammonia gas.
The term hydroxide is generally used to refer to an ion and not a "substance" per se. In that light, hydroxide cannot be a solid, liquid or gas as we think of atoms or molecules. The hydroxide ion is a bonded pair of atoms, one of oxygen and one of hydrogen. It has the chemical symbol OH- because this ion "came from somewhere" with a "partner" ion that a "+" charge on it. The ions, because they are in a situation where they've become separated from each other, are not generally considered using the term "liquid" when we look at them (even though they may be in liquid solution).
When left open to air, carbon dioxide will react at the gas-liquid interface. CO2 + 2OH- --> 2HCO3-
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is the alkali most often used in making handmade liquid soaps.
liquid to gas is called evaporation and gas to liquid is condensation
Ammonia (it tranforms into ammonium hydroxide by Gas-absorption refrigerator).
No, ammonium hydroxide is highly volatile and gives out ammonia gas.
they are both different phases of the same thing (hydrogen hydroxide, so to speak).
The term hydroxide is generally used to refer to an ion and not a "substance" per se. In that light, hydroxide cannot be a solid, liquid or gas as we think of atoms or molecules. The hydroxide ion is a bonded pair of atoms, one of oxygen and one of hydrogen. It has the chemical symbol OH- because this ion "came from somewhere" with a "partner" ion that a "+" charge on it. The ions, because they are in a situation where they've become separated from each other, are not generally considered using the term "liquid" when we look at them (even though they may be in liquid solution).
hydroxide, silver nitrate solution, hydrochloric acid, sodium hydroxide
When left open to air, carbon dioxide will react at the gas-liquid interface. CO2 + 2OH- --> 2HCO3-
It is aqueous
Hydrogen gas is given out when sodium hydroxide reacts with a metal.
9.55
Solid
Yes
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is the alkali most often used in making handmade liquid soaps.