Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7) is a basic salt.
Potassium hydroxide is the most common. J Ayres
The most base is potassium hydroxide.Its chemical formula is (KOH)
It is not a acid or base. It is a neutral compound.
KSCN is actually Neutral, and is not acidic nor basic.
Potassium ethanoate = C2H3KO2
No, the formal name is potassium ethanoate
Base and acid. Ammonium ethanoate is am amphoteric salt.
Formula: H3C-(C=O)-OK
The products are Silver chloride (a white precipitate) and potassium ethanoate (acetate). NB THis is a classic test for halides.
NONE!!! You have pitched the question the wrong way around. It should be 'How many compounds contain the element potassium?' The answer is hundreds if not thousands. Here are a few compounds containing potassium Potassium oxide (K2O) Potassium hydroxide (KOH) Potassium Carbonate (K2CO3) Potassium chloride (KCl) Potassium permanganate ( KMnO7) Potassium ethanoate (CH3COOK) et.seq.,
An acid base titration is only complete at the equivalence point, this occurs when the number of equivalence of base added is exactly equal to the number of equivalence of acid present.in this case HCL()acid +NAOH (base). being both colorless solutions the equivalents point is not visually determined therefore an indicator such as phenolphthalein is generally used. As regards the methyl ethanoate it produces a mixture of methanol and sodium ethanoate.
you mean a base or an acid? K2CrO4 is a base
Sodium Acetate is also known as Sodium Ethanoate.
potassium hydroxide is a base. anythng with hydroxide at the end is an alkali
Acid = Hydroiodic acid Base = Potassium hydroxide (or any Potassium salt of weak acid)
Correctly written it is 'CH3COO^- ' it is a conjugate base. It is named as Ethanoate ion or Acetate ion.