salt
FeO is a base. It is formed from the reaction of iron (II) ions with oxide ions, and it can react with acids to form salts.
The oxide formed in gold is neither an acid nor a base. Gold oxide (Au2O3) is considered to be amphoteric, which means it can exhibit characteristics of both an acid and a base depending on the reaction it undergoes. It can react with both acids and bases to form different compounds.
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
Calcium ethanoate is formed when ethanoic acid reacts with calcium oxide. This is a salt that is derived from ethanoic acid and calcium oxide.
No. Copper oxide has no acid-base properties.
something else
It is nonmetallic because it is a gas, but it can react with a metal to create something called an oxide. so... metal + oxygen --> Metaloxide.
FeO is a base. It is formed from the reaction of iron (II) ions with oxide ions, and it can react with acids to form salts.
Yes. aluminum will react with some acids. But after being exposed to air it forms an oxide layer that many acids can't penetrate.
metal oxide
Nitrogen Oxide
The oxide formed in gold is neither an acid nor a base. Gold oxide (Au2O3) is considered to be amphoteric, which means it can exhibit characteristics of both an acid and a base depending on the reaction it undergoes. It can react with both acids and bases to form different compounds.
No, only aluminum oxide, lead oxide and zinc oxide are amphoteric oxides.
Aluminium oxide, Al2O3, alumina, is an amphoteric oxide. It is not very reactive, but does react with acids and bases. It dissolves in acids. With bases it can forms aluminates containing polyatomic anions containing aluminium. ions.
Copper sulfate is the salt formed when copper oxide and sulfuric acid react together.
Calcium ethanoate is formed when ethanoic acid reacts with calcium oxide. This is a salt that is derived from ethanoic acid and calcium oxide.
No. Copper oxide has no acid-base properties.