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You have to specify the sulphate of which element.
Sulfate/Sulphate dissolved in water is blue in color. That's COPPER sulphate; there are many other sulphates which have many different colours, or are colourless.
Yes it dose .
Ammonium sulphate and potassium nitrate do not react. All that will happen is that the solution will contain separate ammonium, sulphate, potassium, and nitrate ions dissolved in an aqueous (water) solution.
Yes, all ions make water more conductible, the smaller > the better!
You have to specify the sulphate of which element.
Sulfate/Sulphate dissolved in water is blue in color. That's COPPER sulphate; there are many other sulphates which have many different colours, or are colourless.
Yes it dose .
Ammonium sulphate and potassium nitrate do not react. All that will happen is that the solution will contain separate ammonium, sulphate, potassium, and nitrate ions dissolved in an aqueous (water) solution.
Copper Sulphate mixed with hot water makes Copper Sulphate Crystals.
20g I think
Yes, all ions make water more conductible, the smaller > the better!
Increasing the temperature the solubility increase, also the dissolution rate.
The salt doesn't exactly "react" with water, but is dissolved by the water, or is solvated by the water. The salt ionizes into its constituent parts (ions) and these are then surrounded by water molecules. For copper sulfate, the equation is simply CuSO4 ---> Cu^2+ + SO4^2-
The potassium salts sulphate, phosphate, and bicarbonates all dissociate when dissolved in water, making the resulting solution capable of conducting electricity.
The solution of aluminium sulfate may be stored an indefinitely period.
Because in solution the ions Cu2+ and (SO4)2- are formed.