It is an acidic salt of sulfuric acid.
Found in some iodized salt
Actually there are two possibillities:K2SO4, potassium sulfate, when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 2 moles potassium hydroxide 2 KOH + H2SO4 ------> K2SO4 + 2 H2OorKHSO4, potassium hydrogen sulfate (-bisulfate), when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 1 mole potassium hydroxide 1 KOH + H2SO4 ------> KHSO4 + H2O
something inert: potassium chloride, sodium chloride
Potassium is an alkali metal but it is only found in nature as an ionic salt.
Potassium chloride is a compound of potassium, and is a salt you can use as an alternative for sodium salt. Potassium itself is a chemical element and is highly reactive.
The Acrolein Test uses Potassium BiSulfate (KHSO4), not Potassium Bisulfide (KHS). It is the BiSulfate ion that does the work, so the Sodium salt should work. You should always test your reagents with glycerine.
potassium hydrogen sulfate or potassium bisulfate
pottasium bisulfate((HSO4)1-) K+ + (HSO4)1- yields KHSO4
Found in some iodized salt
An ionically bonded salt.
I believe it is Potassium Hydride. I believe it is Potassium Hydride.
Salt Petre, also called Nitre, or Potassium Nitrate.
Actually there are two possibillities:K2SO4, potassium sulfate, when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 2 moles potassium hydroxide 2 KOH + H2SO4 ------> K2SO4 + 2 H2OorKHSO4, potassium hydrogen sulfate (-bisulfate), when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 1 mole potassium hydroxide 1 KOH + H2SO4 ------> KHSO4 + H2O
No, salt is composed of sodium and chloride.
It always ends in a salt and water. The salt is not always NaCl (NaCl is table salt) another example is NaHSO4 (Sodium Bisulfate)
The formula for potassium bisulfate is KHSO4. Using the atomic weights on the periodic table for each element, the molar mass of KHSO4 is 136.1688g/mol. Therefore, 1 mol KHSO4 = 136.1688g 282.1g KHSO4 x (1mol KHSO4/136.1688g KHSO4)= 2.027 mol KHSO4
Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7) is a basic salt.