Mn(s) + H2SO4(aq) ------> MnSO4(aq) + H2(g) [molecular] Mn(s) + 2H+(aq) -----> Mn2+(aq) + H2(g) [net ionic]
Yes, calcium nitrate is an ionic crystalline salt of calcium normally encountered as the tetrahydrate, Ca(NO3)2.4H2O
Manganese(II) sulfate dihydrate, if it were existent. However, only anhydrous, monohydrate and tetrahydrate are known stable crystallic forms of manganese(II) sulfate.
The formula for nickel II sulfate tetrahydrate is NiSO4 * 4H2O.
The chemical formula is CuAl6(PO4)4(OH)8·4H2O. Often simply called hydrated copper aluminium phosphate. Its full name would be lalong the lines and I could be wrong,( its a name that will never catch on) Hexa- aluminium monocopper octahydroxide tetraphosphate tetrahydrate.
bariumiodide tetrahydrate
Magnesium phosphate tetrahydrate
Yes. I take a product that is acetaminophen....250mg, magnesium tetrahydrate-tetrahydrate....290mg, and caffeine....50mg each tablet and they work wonders. It is a generic made for first aid direct in mason, OH. Not sure the major brand equivalent
That would be an inorganic compound.
"Manganese acetate" probably means more exactly manganese (III) acetate and "manganous acetate" almost certainly means manganese (II) acetate. Under this assumption, the difference between the two compounds in the question is that manganese acetate tetrahydrate has the formula Mn(C2H3O2)3. 4 H2O has the formula Mn(C2H3O2)2. 4 H2O.
not sure but try beryllium sulfate tetrahydrate
Mn(s) + H2SO4(aq) ------> MnSO4(aq) + H2(g) [molecular] Mn(s) + 2H+(aq) -----> Mn2+(aq) + H2(g) [net ionic]
377.332g (anhydrous) 438.5966g (monohydrate) 499.8476g (dihydrate) 622.353g (tetrahydrate) 744.872g (hexahydrate)
Yes, calcium nitrate is an ionic crystalline salt of calcium normally encountered as the tetrahydrate, Ca(NO3)2.4H2O
22.5 M
Melting point 561 °C (anhydrous) 42.7 °C (tetrahydrate)Boiling point decomposes (anhydrous) 132 °C (tetrahydrate) Calcium nitrate has the above data from the relevant wikipedia page. This means that at room temp (250C), it is solid
Manganese(II) sulfate dihydrate, if it were existent. However, only anhydrous, monohydrate and tetrahydrate are known stable crystallic forms of manganese(II) sulfate.