Sodium Suphate is a neutral salt because it a salt of strong acid (sulphuric acid) so the pH of the solution makes little or no difference to it's solubility.
This is sodium sulfate, or more properly sodium sulfate(VI).
Sodium phosphate is soluble in water. Normally, compounds of the phosphate ion are insoluble, the exceptions being salts of NH4+ and the alkali metal cations (the sodium ion is one).
Sodium fluoride is more soluble.
No. Sodium compounds do have a limit to their solubility in water. Methanol is water soluble in all proportions.
Sodium is ionic, meaning that sodium methylparaben has a polarity that methylparaben does not. Polar solutions will always be more soluble in other polar solutions (like water, for example) than in non-polar solutions.
Sodium sulfate is more soluble in water than zinc sulfate.
Sodium sulfate is somewhat soluble in cold water, but much more soluble in hot water. In fact, its solubility increases more than 10 times between 0oC and 32.4oC!
This is sodium sulfate, or more properly sodium sulfate(VI).
Sodium nitrate is more soluble than sodium chloride; sand is insoluble in water.
Sodium carbonate is more soluble.
The solution Na2 is soluble in water but not soluble in alcohol. Hope I was of help. Jlove
Sodium phosphate is soluble in water. Normally, compounds of the phosphate ion are insoluble, the exceptions being salts of NH4+ and the alkali metal cations (the sodium ion is one).
Sodium fluoride is more soluble.
It is false; sodium iodide is more soluble than sodium chloride in water.
Yes, lithium chloride is more soluble.
No. Sodium compounds do have a limit to their solubility in water. Methanol is water soluble in all proportions.
Sodium nitrate is more soluble in water.