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Yes, it will form the weak alkali aqueous ammonia/ ammonia solution/ ammonium hydroxide.
No. While sodium acetate will form an aqueous solution, the pure substance is not aqueous. If you want to annotate that it is aqueous in a chemical formula, you follow the substance with (aq) in this manner: NaC2H3O2 (aq)
No, Mn is a transition metal and is typically found in solid form rather than in aqueous solution.
When glucose or other monosaccharides are placed in an aqueous solution, they curl and take a ring form. This is in contrast to the linear form they take otherwise.
Silver nitrate for example: AgI(s) silver iodide
Yes. Base dissociates into ions in aqueous solution.
In solid form not, but in aqueous solution it is.
Sodium chloride may form aqueous solutions.
Yes, it will form the weak alkali aqueous ammonia/ ammonia solution/ ammonium hydroxide.
Magnesium chloride is a compound. It can dissolve in water to form an aqueous solution.
2NaCO3 + CaCl2 < > Ca(CO3)2 + 2NaCl
Copper acetate is a solid compound which can be either dissolved to form an aqueous solution, or if sufficiently heated will become a gas.
an aqueous form of hydrogen peroxide H2O2 (aq)
No. While sodium acetate will form an aqueous solution, the pure substance is not aqueous. If you want to annotate that it is aqueous in a chemical formula, you follow the substance with (aq) in this manner: NaC2H3O2 (aq)
No, Mn is a transition metal and is typically found in solid form rather than in aqueous solution.
Yes, in this case you would have an aqueous solution of sodium chloride and acetic acid.
Form an aqueous solution