- 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).
The classes of mineral salts include carbonates, sulfates, silicates, halides, oxides, and sulfides based on their chemical composition. These classes are defined by the specific combination of elements within the mineral structure.
The six classes of non-silicate minerals are carbonates, sulfides, sulfates, halides, native elements, and oxides. Each class is defined by the chemical composition and structure of the minerals within that group.
Nitric acid produces nitrates when it reacts with metal oxides, hydroxides, or carbonates. Nitrates are compounds that contain the nitrate ion (NO3-).
The salts of carbonic acids are called bicarbonates (or hydrogen carbonates) and carbonates.
Salts are not only compounds of oxygen.
Sulfuric acid can form salts by reacting with metals, metal oxides, metal hydroxides or metal carbonates. Some common salts produced from sulfuric acid include sulfates such as sodium sulfate (Na2SO4), copper sulfate (CuSO4) and zinc sulfate (ZnSO4).
The solubility of carbonate salts varies depending on the specific salt and the conditions. Generally, carbonates of alkali metals like sodium and potassium are soluble in water, while carbonates of transition metals are not very soluble.
Carbonates of metals typically exhibit thermal stability, breaking down upon heating to release carbon dioxide and form metal oxides. They are often ionic compounds, with metal cations bonded to carbonate anions (CO3²⁻). Solubility varies widely among different metal carbonates; for instance, alkali metal carbonates are generally soluble in water, while many transition metal carbonates are insoluble. Additionally, metal carbonates can react with acids to produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and corresponding metal salts.
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.