No. Potassium is a metal.
Acid; Ethanoic (Acetic) Acid Alkali(Base) ; Potassium hydroxide.
Potassium will react violently, with acid. The reaction can potentially splatter droplets of acid or pieces of burning potassium.
To make potassium iodide, you would need to first react iodine with potassium hydroxide. This will create potassium iodate, which can then be reduced to potassium iodide using a reducing agent like sulfur dioxide or hydriodic acid.
Potassium Flouride is a salt. It is neither acid nor base. It tends to be slightly alkaline.
No, potassium acetate is a salt formed by the reaction of a strong base (potassium hydroxide) with a weak acid (acetic acid). Potassium acetate is neutral and does not act as an acid in aqueous solutions.
When sulfuric acid reacts with potassium nitrate, it forms potassium sulfate, nitric acid, and water.
Potassium displaces the hydrogen in sulfuric acid when reacting with potassium hydroxide to form potassium sulfate and water.
Potassium is too reactive to mix with acid
No, potassium chloride is not an acid. It is a salt composed of potassium and chloride ions.
Potassium sulfate is neither a base nor an acid. It is a salt that is formed by the reaction of a base (potassium hydroxide) and an acid (sulfuric acid).
This question cannot be answered because if you neutralise citric acid you will get a citrate, not a nitrate. To get potassium nitrate you will need the alkali potassium hydroxide and nitric acid.
Potassium Perchlorate