RbOH is the chemical formula of rubidium hydroxide.
Rubidium Hydroxide (RbOH) is a weak base.
HClO + RbOH ==> H2O + RbClOmoles RbOH used = 0.0153 L x 0.10 mol/L = 0.00153 moles moles HClO present = 0.00153 moles (1:1 mole ratio in balanced equation) Concentration of HClO = 0.00153 moles/0.0505 L = 0.030 M (to 2 significant figures)
This is called a base.Examples are the alkalis of group I elements: LiOH, NaOH, KOH, RbOH, CsOH.
The Stock system is not used for these salts because the cations have only 1 oxidation number. So, for Rb and K it is 1+ and for Ca it is 2+ and for Al it is 3+. The stock system is used for the transition metals to indicate which oxidation state they are in.
RbOH is the chemical formula of rubidium hydroxide.
Rubidium Hydroxide (RbOH) is a weak base.
RbOH ( Rubidium hydroxide) is a strong alkali. An Alkali is a soluble base.
Rubidium hydroxide, RbOH.
RbOH + HNO ==> H2O + RbNO. NOTE: HNO (nitroxyl) is normally found in the gas phase. In aqueous soln., it can act as an acid to produce H+ + NO-. If the question was mean to read RbOH + HNO3, the the products would be H2O + RbNO3.
Rubidium hydroxide is an ionic compound.
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It is not soluble in nonpolar solvents.
HF + RbOH --> RbF + H2O
The term Rubidium oxide generally refers to 1 compound, but it can also be used to refer some other oxides. There can be more than 1 oxides of Rubidium : "The most common" Rubidium oxide = Rb2O Rubidium peroxide = Rb2O2 Rubidium dioxide(1-) or Rubidium superoxide = RbO2 Suboxides of Rubidium = Rb6O, Rb9O2
Yes RbOH is soluble (100g per 100 mL)
You need more info to answer this problem. The molarity of your solution would be a good start.