Cobaltic Bisulfate
The formula is poorly constructed. It should probably appear as Co(HSO4)3.
"Cobaltic" is somewhat archaic. The Stock system, using Roman numerals, is preferred. Therefore, it would be called cobalt (III) bisulfate or cobalt (III) hydrogen sulfate.
Al(HSO4)3
Al(SO4)3 ^That is completely wrong. Al(SO4)3 is aluminum sulfate cobalt ii sulfide is CoS actually you both are wronq. its really CoSO4 <<< cobalt sulfate Wow. He/She was right. Your totally wrong. Cobalt (II) Co^2+ and Sulfide is S^2- So the answer is CoS. Signs cancel themselves out..
The name of the HSO4 2- ion is hydrogen sulfate or bisulfate ion.
biSulfate ion or Hydrogen Sulfate
H2SO4 is already a strong acid.If you mean what is the conjugate base, then the answer is HSO4-
Co(HSO4)2
Al(HSO4)3
The chemical formula for aluminum borate is Al2(B3O6)(OH)3.
The chemical formula of cobalt hydrogen sulfite is Co(HSO3)2.
Al(HSO4)3
Al(SO4)3 ^That is completely wrong. Al(SO4)3 is aluminum sulfate cobalt ii sulfide is CoS actually you both are wronq. its really CoSO4 <<< cobalt sulfate Wow. He/She was right. Your totally wrong. Cobalt (II) Co^2+ and Sulfide is S^2- So the answer is CoS. Signs cancel themselves out..
Al(HSO4)3
The name of the HSO4 2- ion is hydrogen sulfate or bisulfate ion.
biSulfate ion or Hydrogen Sulfate
H2SO4 is already a strong acid.If you mean what is the conjugate base, then the answer is HSO4-
HSO4- is a weak acid. It is the conjugate base of sulfuric acid (H2SO4), which is a strong acid. However, HSO4- itself is a weak acid and partially dissociates in water.
HSO4- is a stronger acid than NH4+