- carbonates are salts.
- oxides are...oxides not salts
- hydrogencarbonates are salts
The chemistry of complex carbon compounds (other than simple salts such as carbonates, oxides, and carbides).
Oxides are compounds of oxygen with another chemical element. Salts are the products of the reactions between acids and bases (neutralization reactions).
Sulfides, sulfates, carbonates, halides, phosphates, and hydroxides.
The salts of carbonic acids are called bicarbonates (or hydrogen carbonates) and carbonates.
Salts are not only compounds of oxygen.
Some carbonates are soluble (carbonates of alkali metals) and some carbonates are practically insoluble in water (calcium and magnesium carbonate etc.).
Yes; for example soluble carbonates.
as we all know that the sea waters are salty in taste, its filtration can be of several types, depends upon the product we want.it mainly produces salts, carbonates. And many other metallic oxides,by which we can alternately get the metals.
Metal Salts + water
A chemical sedimentary rock. Evaporites are formed in this depositional environment. Salts, carbonates, and sulfates mostly. Halite, sylvite, calcite, gypsum, etc.
Carbonate is not a compound at all, because it is not electrically neutral; instead it is a polyatomic ion, with a charge of -2. Most carbonate salts are stable at standard temperature and pressure, but most of them will convert from carbonates to oxides by releasing carbon dioxide when heated sufficiently.
They can be silicates or vanadates, nitrates or chlorides, carbonates or arsenides etc.