Lead sulfate is not soluble in water.
This compound is soluble in water.
Yes, I know strontium iodate does.
The ions are different: chlorate/chloride, sulfate/sulfide, etc.
Barium sulfate is inorganic compound.
Zinc sulfate is an ionic chemical compound.
lead IV chlorate
Lead sulfate is not soluble in water.
Sodium sulfate is an ionic compound. An ionic compound is a reaction that consists of a metal and non-metal, or essentially the attracting of a cation for an anion. i hope this helps!
This compound is soluble in water.
element replaces one element in a compound called single replacement reaction.
Lithium nitrate, sodium sulfate, potassium chlorate, all other nitrate, sodium, and chlorate salts, all amino acids, all alcohols, all ketones, all carboxylic acids and all of their salts, etc.
Sodium sulfate dissolves in water to produce a solution of sodium sulfate.
If you mean copper sulfate, then yes, it is a compound.
Aluminium sulfate is an ionic compound.
Yes, I know strontium iodate does.
(NH4)+ is Ammonium ion and (CLO3)- is chlorate ion; therefore, the name of the substance would be: Ammonium Chlorate. It is an inorganic compound. It crystallizes in small needles, readily soluble in water. It decomposes at about 102 °C, with liberation of nitrogen, chlorine and oxygen. It is soluble in dilute aqueous alcohol, but insoluble in strong alcohol. Ammonium Chlorate is obtained by neutralizing chloric acid with either ammonia or ammonium carbonate, or by precipitating barium, strontium or calcium chlorates with ammonium carbonate or ammonium sulfate, producing the respective carbonate or sulfate precipitate and an ammonium chlorate solution. Ammonium chlorate is a strong oxidizer and should never be stored with flammable materials. It is very unstable, and will decompose, sometimes violently, at room temperature. This results from the mixture of the reducing ammonium cation and the oxidizing chlorate anion. Even solutions are known to be unstable. Because of the dangerous nature of this salt it should only be kept in solution when needed, and never be allowed to crystallize.
Barium sulfate is an inorganic compound. During a dissociation reaction, it would separate into its two components, barium and sulfate (Ba 2+ and SO4 2-).