Some examples are: indium bromide, calcium bromide, cadmium chlorate.
CaCO3
No two different salts have the same solublity because of various qualities including the solublity product.
Each salt has a specific solubility at a given temperature. See a short table at the link below.
This happens due to the increased solubility in the saturated film and diffusion layer of the salts of weak acids.
Solubility rules say that salts of nitrates (NO3) are soluble...I can't physically say why though
CaCO3
sparingly soluble salts solubility is measured by conductometric method
Increasing the temperature the solubilty of salts in water is higher.
Salts can be soluble or insoluble. The solubility depends principally on solvent, temperature, pressure rtc.
no all the salts have different solubility depending upon their extent of ionization
Solubility of any solvent is usually temperature dependent and yes, the solubility of most salts increase when the temperature is increased. However the solubility of some salts also decreases with increasing temperature.
See this link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solubility_table.
This is called the solubility at a given temperature and pressure.
Examples: water solubility, pH of the solution, density.
In general, the solubility of a salt increases as the temperature is raised, and thus decreases when the temperature is lowered.
No two different salts have the same solublity because of various qualities including the solublity product.
One of the commonest kinds of precipitate is salts with very low solubility. The separate cations and anions of these salts generally have many other salts with much higher solubility. Any pair of such more soluble salts will yield the same precipitate, but will have a different molecular equation from any other such pair.