Yes, iron hydroxides are basic compounds (the term alkali has different meanings in different languages).
Iron III hydroxide is not classified as an alkali. It is a chemical compound that is considered a weak base, as it can act as a proton acceptor in some reactions but is not as strong as traditional alkalis like sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide.
Alkali. IF something contains hydroxide ions it is an alkali.
An alkali is a base, a hydroxide (containing the group OH-), as sodium hydroxide - NaOH.
Iron can be reacted with sulfuric acid to produce iron sulfate. Iron sulfate can also be produced by reacting iron with sodium hydroxide and sulfuric acid.
No. An alkali is a compound: the hydroxide of al alkali metal.
Potassium hydroxide is both an alkali and a base. Alkali typically refers to a soluble base, and since potassium hydroxide dissolves in water to form hydroxide ions, it is considered an alkali. Additionally, as a strong base, it can accept protons from acids, making it a base.
Lithium hydroxide is the strongest alkali in the alkali metal group.
A hydroxide solution is typically considered an alkali. This is because hydroxide ions (OH-) present in the solution can accept protons, leading to a basic (alkaline) pH.
base which is soluble in water is called alkali. example the lithium,calcium sodium ,potassium,rubidium ,francium all are alkali metals. they form sodium hydroxide,potassium hydroxide,calcium hydroxide all are strong bases .when they dissolve in water they form strong alkali.
Yep, everything with 'hydroxide' can be called an alkali no matter its state of matter. :)
As with all hydroxides it is an alkali.
Yes, ammonium hydroxide is considered an alkali because it is a soluble base that dissociates into hydroxide ions (OH-) in aqueous solution.