Salt is a type of compound, not a "chemical property."
Salts do have certain characteristic properties... they tend to be brittle rather than malleable, they tend to have high melting points, and they tend to be more soluble in water than in organic solvents.
Examples: chemical reactivity, solubility in water, stability, thermal decomposition, chemical composition etc.
It is not a property, it is a chemical reaction.
- all metal salts are ionic compounds - many salts are soluble in water and are dissociated
it changes chemical properties
If it's a chemical, it has chemical properties. An oreo churro (whatever unholy abomination that might be) is a mixture of chemicals, each of which will have their own chemical properties.
Salts are chemical compounds not elements.
Dissolved salts have an influence on the physical, chemical and biological properties of the solution.
It is not a property, it is a chemical reaction.
Each salt has a different chemical composition and consequently different chemical and physical properties.
no
They can undergo subtitution reactions easily to form halogenated products. Submitted by pharm ajar
Potassium. Sodium is in group1 (period2) the next heaviest element is potassium (period 3). Potassium forms salts with the K+ ion.
YES
The electrical properties of salts are very different.
- carbonates are salts.- oxides are...oxides not salts- hydrogencarbonates are salts
See this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table.
The chemical properties of calcium are most similar to (in between) the chemical properties of magnesium and strontium.
- all metal salts are ionic compounds - many salts are soluble in water and are dissociated