A hydrate either means that it contains hydrogen or that it contains water. Either way, the answer is no. It is comprised of sodium, sulfur, and oxygen.
However, it is possible to make hydrates of sodium sulfate.
For sodium sulfate decahydrate (Na2SO4·10H2O), on heating, 10 moles of water molecules will be driven off per mole of the hydrate. Each formula unit of the hydrate contains 10 water molecules.
No, sodium laureth sulfate and sodium lauryl sulfate are not the same. Sodium laureth sulfate is a milder surfactant compared to sodium lauryl sulfate, which can be harsher on the skin.
Magnesium sulfate by itself is not a hydrate.A hydrate has water in it. Magnesium only have magnesium, sulfur, and oxygen. Added with water, it is considered as a hydrate. The most common one is heptahydrate epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O).
No, sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium laureth sulfate are not the same. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a harsher cleansing agent, while sodium laureth sulfate is milder and less irritating to the skin.
not sure but try beryllium sulfate tetrahydrate
This percentage is different for each chemical compound.
The answer is 10 moles water.
For sodium sulfate decahydrate (Na2SO4·10H2O), on heating, 10 moles of water molecules will be driven off per mole of the hydrate. Each formula unit of the hydrate contains 10 water molecules.
10 moles of water are released.
The hydrate of Na2S is Na2S.9H2O. Its name is sodium sulfide nonahydrate.
No, sodium laureth sulfate and sodium lauryl sulfate are not the same. Sodium laureth sulfate is a milder surfactant compared to sodium lauryl sulfate, which can be harsher on the skin.
Magnesium sulfate by itself is not a hydrate.A hydrate has water in it. Magnesium only have magnesium, sulfur, and oxygen. Added with water, it is considered as a hydrate. The most common one is heptahydrate epsomite (MgSO4·7H2O).
No, sodium lauryl sulfate and sodium laureth sulfate are not the same. Sodium lauryl sulfate is a harsher cleansing agent, while sodium laureth sulfate is milder and less irritating to the skin.
That is magnesium sulfate hydrate.
not sure but try beryllium sulfate tetrahydrate
Yes, sodium laureth sulfate is considered a sulfate.
The formula for cupric sulfate hydrate is CuSO4 · xH2O, where x represents the number of water molecules associated with each copper sulfate molecule.