A practical use for metal salt colors is pyrotechnics. Many technicians use these colored salts for things like concerts to provide entertainment.
You could use potassium, rubidium or caesium. However, there is no practical reason why you would do this. You'd have to do it in the melt, which would be hazardous, as all these metals react with water.
No use of iodide salts in argentometrics because AgI is very insoluble, about 1000 times less soluble then AgCl, originating from chlorides to be determined.
Ti is a metal because we use as a metal and we can use it for anything we need that needs metal in it
Complementary colours are the colours that are opposite each other on the colour wheel.
Ammonium is a source of nitrogen for many plants.
Metal is actually a chemical element, so there is more than one way to make it, but alloys (two or more elements in a solid solution) are usually needed to make a metal hard enough for practical use.
Aborigines do not use colours such as pinks and fluoro colours.
Some salts as microcrystals can increase the precipitations as rain.
You could use potassium, rubidium or caesium. However, there is no practical reason why you would do this. You'd have to do it in the melt, which would be hazardous, as all these metals react with water.
ammonium salts; nitrate salts.
The cause is the irrational use of fertilizers.
Generally white plasticene or plastilena which is dyed the colours that you want to use, on top of a metal armature (wires are the cheapest but professional studios will build them).
use advancing colours in a small room and receding colours in a bigger room
dull colours
how do you use the properties of similarity to solve practical problem
Globalsalts is a company which sell different types of salts for alimentary use. See the link below.
Science used for practical purposes is technology.