There are two iron chlorides iron(II) chloride (ferrous chloride) and iron(III) chloride (ferric chloride. Both are termed salts. Both are ionic. and are often encountered as hydrates e.g. FeCl3.6H2O.
No, iron sulfate is just one of more iron salts, among which iron chloride, -nitrate, -ammonium sulfate, sulfide etc.
NO, sulfur is an element.
No, iron sulphide is not a salt :)
salt is sodium chloride. NaCl is the formula
Iron(III) Chloride / Ferric Chloride / Iron Trichloride
Iron(II) chloride or ferrous chloride as well as iron(III) chloride or ferric chloride are both solids.
The chemical formula for ferrous chloride or iron (II) chloride is FeCl2.
FeCl2 for Iron II Chloride and FeCl3 for Iron III Chloride
There are two Iron chlorides. Iron(II) chloride, in which iron is in +2 oxidation state, and Iron(III) chloride, in which iron is in +3 oxidation state.
A salt with the formula FeCl3.
It is iron III chloride, a toxic yellow salt with the formula FeCl3
Assuming iron II.Fe + 2HCl --> FeCl2 + H2A salt, iron II chloride ( also known as ferrous chloride ), and hydrogen gas.
Salt doesn't dissolve objects but the ion chloride has a corroding action on iron and alloys.
A heterogeneous mixture: There are no chemical bonds between the iron filings and sand.
Sodium chloride is soluble in water and the solution is filtered.
Because the ion chloride (Cl-) from salt is very corrosive.
Iron(III) Chloride / Ferric Chloride / Iron Trichloride
Iron(II) chloride or ferrous chloride as well as iron(III) chloride or ferric chloride are both solids.
There are two iron chlorides : Iron(II) Chloride = FeCl2 Iron(III) Chloride = FeCl3
There is iron (II) chloride (ferrous chloride, iron dichloride). There is also iron (III) chloride (ferric chloride, iron trichloride).
The chemical formula for ferrous chloride or iron (II) chloride is FeCl2.