maybe not
Ammonium sulfate is very soluble in water; it is used as fertilizer.
No, all the sulfate compounds are highly soluble in water.
Ammonium sulphate is very soluble in water: 74,4 g/100 mL at 20 0C.
I suppose that you think to ammonia, not ammonium; the solubility of ammonia at 25 0C is 31 %.
To prepare a solution of ferrous sulfate ammonium sulfate, you would first dissolve the appropriate amount of ferrous sulfate heptahydrate in water. Then, separately dissolve ammonium sulfate in water. Finally, mix the two solutions together in the correct proportions to obtain the desired concentration of ferrous sulfate ammonium sulfate solution.
Yes.
Ammonium sulfate is very soluble in water; it is used as fertilizer.
No, all the sulfate compounds are highly soluble in water.
Ammonium sulfate is soluble in water.
Yes Ammonium sulfate is soluble in water because it is an ionic compound of ammonium ions and sulfate.
Ammonium sulphate is very soluble in water: 74,4 g/100 mL at 20 0C.
Ammonium sulphate is very soluble in water: 74,4 g/100 mL at 20 0C.
I suppose that you think to ammonia, not ammonium; the solubility of ammonia at 25 0C is 31 %.
Sodium sulfate is practically insoluble in ethanol. But it adsorbs ethanol as well as methanol.
This compound is soluble in water.
If you treat an unknown sample with ammonium sulfate (or any other soluble sulfate) and get a precipitate, you can conclude that there's a metal ion which forms insoluble sulfates in it. (Pretty much all ammonium salts are soluble, so you don't need to worry about the anion.)
The most soluble is the ammonium sulfate - 81,2 g/100 g water.