Yes. Potassium on its own is a soft, highly reactive metallic element that can form a variety of ionic compounds with.
Potassium sorbate is one of them, a compound of potassium, carbon, hydrogen., and oxygen. It is much more stable the elemental potassium. Its is commonly used as a preservative.
yes
It's definitely just potassium, champ. If you mean the name of the Latin origin of potassium, that's kalium. (That's where the K's from.)
Potassium (K)
No. Potassium is K and Sodium is Na. Potassium is K; Sodium hydroxide is NaOH (aq) Perhaps you meant Potassium hydroxide? KOH (aq) both are very strong bases, meaning that both will disassociate completely in water, but they are not the same thing.
The element with the symbol K on the periodic table is potassium.
It is potassium . The 'K' comes from the Latin for potassium , which is 'Kalium'.
It's definitely just potassium, champ. If you mean the name of the Latin origin of potassium, that's kalium. (That's where the K's from.)
K stands for potassium. An isotope is the same element with with the same atomic number but other properties may vary. Therefor, k-37 and k-42 are both potassium isotopes
Potassium is not a Vitamin, it is a mineral.
why sodium and potassium lie in the same groups
Potassium (K)
No. Potassium is K and Sodium is Na. Potassium is K; Sodium hydroxide is NaOH (aq) Perhaps you meant Potassium hydroxide? KOH (aq) both are very strong bases, meaning that both will disassociate completely in water, but they are not the same thing.
K is potassium and I is Iodine. K is potassium and I is Iodine
The element with the symbol K on the periodic table is potassium.
Nope - phosphorus and potassium are two completely different elements. The chemical symbol for Phosphorus is P - and for Potassium, it's K.
It is potassium . The 'K' comes from the Latin for potassium , which is 'Kalium'.
Potassium, K, has 19 protons
The K stands for potassium. On the periodic table of elements, K is the symbol for potassium. K-Dur is a potassium supplement.