Iodide in mineral oil is colorless.
Copper is a metallic mineral, while iodide is a salt-based mineral. Copper is essential for various biological functions and is commonly found in nature as native copper or in mineral ores. Iodide, on the other hand, is a form of iodine that is important for thyroid function and is often found in iodized salt.
Silver iodide is typically a yellow or light yellow color.
Mercurous iodide is a yellow compound.
A strong yellow color, from sodium
Silver iodide is typically white or yellowish in color.
purple.
Copper is a metallic mineral, while iodide is a salt-based mineral. Copper is essential for various biological functions and is commonly found in nature as native copper or in mineral ores. Iodide, on the other hand, is a form of iodine that is important for thyroid function and is often found in iodized salt.
Silver iodide is typically a yellow or light yellow color.
Lead(II) iodide is yellow in colour
Mercurous iodide is a yellow compound.
The flame of potassium iodide is typically violet or purple in color.
A strong yellow color, from sodium
Fresh, clean mineral oil is transparent and either colorless or a light golden color.
I think it depends on the mixtures. When I mixed a store bought solution of iodine (2.5% iodine and 2.5% potassium iodide) in water it was brown. But when I added heavy mineral oil and mixed them, the mineral oil layer was a brilliant pink/purple colour. Really impressive. NR Pure iodine is violet. It can act as an electron acceptor (an acid). When iodine is in a solvent that doesn't donate electrons it stays violet. When it is in water or ethanol the iodine accepts electrons from the oxygen atom which then affects the wavelength of visible light that it absorbs, this means that the colour changes.
Silver iodide is typically white or yellowish in color.
Lithium iodide solution is typically colorless to pale yellow in color.
Lead(II) iodide has at room temperature a pretty yellow color.