Sodium hydroxide = NaOH
Calcium hydroxide = Ca(OH)2
If you think to bases as hydroxides some example are: sodium hydroxides, potassium hydroxides, calcium hydroxides, uranium hydroxides etc.
For example hydroxides as calcium, sodium or potassium hydroxide.
When a calcium salt reacts with sodium hydroxide, the precipitate formed is calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2). This is due to the exchange of ions between the calcium salt and sodium hydroxide, resulting in the insoluble calcium hydroxide precipitating out of the solution.
An antacid contains hydroxides of magnesium and aluminium, bicarbonates of calcium and sodium.
Soluble hydroxides are hydroxide compounds that can dissolve in water to form a basic solution. Some common examples include sodium hydroxide (NaOH), potassium hydroxide (KOH), and calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2). These hydroxides dissociate into ions in water, increasing the concentration of hydroxide ions and making the solution basic.
Hydrochloric acid Sulfuric acid Phosphoric acid Sodium hydroxide Calcium hydroxide Potassium hydroxide
No, not all metal hydroxides are soluble in water. Alkaline earth metal hydroxides like calcium hydroxide and barium hydroxide are sparingly soluble, while alkali metal hydroxides like sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide are highly soluble.
The alkali metals and the alkaline earths. These include sodium, potassium, rubidium, calcium etc.
base which is soluble in water is called alkali. example the lithium,calcium sodium ,potassium,rubidium ,francium all are alkali metals. they form sodium hydroxide,potassium hydroxide,calcium hydroxide all are strong bases .when they dissolve in water they form strong alkali.
All hydroxides contain two elements: oxygen and hydrogen. The hydroxide ion (OH⁻) consists of one oxygen atom and one hydrogen atom. Additionally, hydroxides typically combine with a metal or a cation to form a complete compound, such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH) or calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)₂).
sodium, lead, copper or calcium (whitmore high school students i am telling Miss A PATEL LOL
Similar to Sodium and Water. Efferevescence and an alkali product . Ca(s) + 2H2O(l) = Ca(OH)2 (aq) + H2(g). NB Where sodium is a Group '1' metal , it has only ONE hydroxide attached. Calcium is a Group '2' meta; , so it has TWO hydroxides attached.