Examples: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, sodium nitrate, calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate etc.
- some salts as NaCl can be melted - other salts as Na2CO3 are thermally decomposed, obtaining a metal oxide
As all other salts they contain generally a cation and an anion.
there are three types of salt, they are 1) Acidic salt: the salt which is acidic in nature is called acidic salt. 2) Basic salt: the salt which is basic in nature is called basic salt. 3) neutral salt: the salt which is neutral is called neutral salt.
because poo is black
Water molecules are polarized (one side is positive and the other is negative), which encourages the ions in salts to separate from each other.
stontluim
It is found in nature in the form of Bromide salts
Strontium
Magnesium is is a natural element. It stays as salts in the nature.
- some salts as NaCl can be melted - other salts as Na2CO3 are thermally decomposed, obtaining a metal oxide
Some salts are melted, other sublime, other are thermally decomposed.
The most important is sodium chloride; other salts are magnesium and calcium chloride. Many other salts are in extremely low concentration.
Usually found as salts in nature, like CoCl2. Thus, it is a usually a solid, combined with other elements as a mineral.
I think it dissolves ionic salts
Metals form salts.
As all other salts they contain generally a cation and an anion.
Yes; the natural mineral magnesium sulfate (MgSO4.7H2O) is called epsomite.