Silver salts are salts containing the cation of silver: silver nitrate, silver chloride, silver iodide, silver sulfate etc.
Silver nitrate (AgNO3) is a silver salt.
Silver halides contain the metal (Ag, silver) and a halogen: F, Cl, I, Br.
These are salts derived from the same acid; examples are: nitrates, chlorides, sulfates, acetates, fluorides, phosphates etc.
As all salts they are made from a cation and an anion; for example silver halides - AgX - where X may be F, Cl, Br, I.
Examples: silver chloride, silver fluoride, silver iodide, silver bromide, silver astatide, silver sulfide, silver nitrate etc. For silver halogenides a method of preparation is the reaction between silver nitrate and a salt containing the halogen.
Silver salts (AgCl)
Salts are the products of a reaction between an acid and a base.
Silver nitrate (AgNO3) is a silver salt.
Normal is not a correct word; some salts have a neutral water solution, pH=7.
To form an insoluble silver halide.
Examples of silver salts: AgCl, AgNO3, AgI, AgBr etc.
Silver salts. Mainly silver halides.
Silver halides contain the metal (Ag, silver) and a halogen: F, Cl, I, Br.
Examples: silver choride, bromide and iodide.
These are salts derived from the same acid; examples are: nitrates, chlorides, sulfates, acetates, fluorides, phosphates etc.
Chlorides are salts derived from hydrochloric acid, containing the anion chloride (Cl-).
As all salts they are made from a cation and an anion; for example silver halides - AgX - where X may be F, Cl, Br, I.