Examples are: calcium carbonate, calcium oxalate, calcium fluoride etc.
Yes, many salts are insoluble in water and form precipitates; an example is silver chloride.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water.
No. :)
the precipitate is calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and its white in color
No, they do not.
The chemical equation for the reaction is: (NH4)2CO3 + Ca(NO3)2 → CaCO3 + 2NH4NO3 The precipitate formed is calcium carbonate and it appears as a white precipitate.
Yes, it will
the precipitate calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is formed
Some calcium salts are organic, some calcium salts are inorganic.
Some calcium salts are organic, some calcium salts are inorganic.
The precipitate formed is Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3).
The function of calcium salts is to provide hardness and strength and resist compression.
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.
the precipitate is calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and its white in color
no
The precipitate would be calcium carbonate, CaCO3.
Yes, they are calcium salts.
There will be no reaction if all the reactants and possible products are aqueous while there is no insoluble salts precipitate that are formed.
Salts are prepared by a reaction between an acid and a base; the insoluble salt is a precipitate.
Tooth enamel and egg shells both contain calcium salts.