Yes, iron hydroxides are basic compounds (the term alkali has different meanings in different languages).
idkidk
Alkali. IF something contains hydroxide ions it is an alkali.
potassium hydroxide is a base. anythng with hydroxide at the end is an alkali
Alkali
An alkali is a base, a hydroxide (containing the group OH-), as sodium hydroxide - NaOH.
No. An alkali is a compound: the hydroxide of al alkali metal.
An alkali is a soluble base, and zinc hydroxide is insoluble, so it is a base.
To neutralise a strong acid, you would need a strong alkali (or lots of a weak alkali, but that would be impractical). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide would all work.
Yep, everything with 'hydroxide' can be called an alkali no matter its state of matter. :)
As with all hydroxides it is an alkali.
Alkali Metal + Water ------> Alkali Hydroxide + Hydrogen Alkali Metal Oxide + Water ------> Alkali Hydroxide + Water Example: ================ Sodium + Water ------> Sodium Hydroxide + Hydrogen 2 Na + 2 H2O --------> 2 NaOH + H2
There are sodium hydroxide, strontium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and more.