No. Metals are not soluble in water.
Manganese sulfate has an ionic bond.
The solubility of manganese carbonate in water is very low.
No. You can confirm this on wikipedia.
Insoluble. Metallic sulfides are very poorly soluble in water.
Since NaOH is easily water-soluble, complete dissociation will occur, and you will only have ions. Adding manganese ions (in the form of either manganese chloride or manganese nitrate) will give you the net ionic equation Mn+2(aq) + 2OH-(aq) --> Mn(OH)2(s).
Manganese sulfate has an ionic bond.
Manganese is a metal. It is not soluble in water.
manganese sulphate is pale pink colored crystalline powder & it is highly soluble in water
The solubility of manganese carbonate in water is very low.
No. You can confirm this on wikipedia.
Insoluble. Metallic sulfides are very poorly soluble in water.
No. Magnesium will not react with neutral water, but if the water is acidic, it will react. The react is the same as for zinc (see the Related Questions to the left for the chemical equation).
Manganese nodules do not accumulate below 4500 meters depth because the manganese minerals are highly soluble in seawater below that depth.
William R. Knocke has written: 'Removal of soluble manganese from water by oxide-coated filter media' -- subject(s): Water, Purification, Manganese removal, Manganese oxides, Filtration 'Register of environmental engineering graduate programs' -- subject(s): Directories, Environmental engineering, Study and teaching (Graduate)
Using the solubility rule predicts the compound to be soluble. This is what tells what the weather will be like.
= Manganese and Water
Since NaOH is easily water-soluble, complete dissociation will occur, and you will only have ions. Adding manganese ions (in the form of either manganese chloride or manganese nitrate) will give you the net ionic equation Mn+2(aq) + 2OH-(aq) --> Mn(OH)2(s).