Ni2+ + 2Cl-
also OH- + H+ from water
Provided the nickel chloride dissociates, you would have two different types of ions - Ni2+ and Cl-.
Ex.: Ni2+ and Cl-.
CaBr2 will dissociate into Ca2+ ions and two Br- ions. In aqueous solution of CaBr2, water is the solvent and Ca2+ ions and Br- ions are the solute particles.
How many moles of H+ ions are present in the following aqueous solution? 1,410 mL of 0.32 M nitric acid
Yes. Base dissociates into ions in aqueous solution.
Yes. An aqueous solution of ammonium carbonate would consist of dissociated ammonium ions and carbonate ions.
Barium chloride solution: Ba2+ and Cl-. Potassium sulfate: K+ and (SO4)2-.
CaBr2 will dissociate into Ca2+ ions and two Br- ions. In aqueous solution of CaBr2, water is the solvent and Ca2+ ions and Br- ions are the solute particles.
How many moles of H+ ions are present in the following aqueous solution? 1,410 mL of 0.32 M nitric acid
Yes. Base dissociates into ions in aqueous solution.
Yes. An aqueous solution of ammonium carbonate would consist of dissociated ammonium ions and carbonate ions.
Barium chloride solution: Ba2+ and Cl-. Potassium sulfate: K+ and (SO4)2-.
NaCN is soluble in water. The ions present would be the sodium ion (Na+) and the cyanide ion (CN-).
The ions are: Ca2+ and Cl-; the ratio chloride ions/calcium ions is 2.
Aqueous HNO3 (nitric acid) contains H+ ions and NO3- ions.
Two potassium ions. 2K(+) and One polyatomic ion of sulfate SO4(2-)
No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-). Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
nah man. them acids has them lot. the H+ ions that is. but these basic solutions donate a massif amount of OH- ions compared to H+ ions when added to an aqueous solution.
no it's chemical substance and the ions do not conduct sulphur electricity when in aqueous solution!