Lithium flouride is less soluble because the hydration enthalpy of lithiumflouride is less
Chlorine is soluable, potassium however I think not. KClO3 is an ionic compound though.
NaF is an ionic compound consisting of a sodium ion (Na+) with a plus one charge and a fluoride ion (F-) with a minus one charge. Together though, sodium fluoride (NaF) is uncharged because the +1 and -1 charges of the ions cancel out.
Lead nitrate is soluble in water because of the strong electrostatic interactions between the lead cation (Pb2+) and the nitrate anion (NO3-), which are capable of disrupting the lattice energy holding the compound together. This allows water molecules to surround and solvate the individual ions, leading to the dissolution of lead nitrate in water.
The thing is, the iPod Nano 3 isn't out yet so we don't know. That pmao though
According to the given chemical formula, the compound is magnesium peroxide. It is an unstable compound in nature though.
Lithium ions have a charge of +1 and fluoride ions have a charge of -1. The formula unit for lithium fluoride is LiF, which means that the lithium and fluoride ions are present in a 1:1 ratio. So the positive and negative charges cancel each other, and the compound lithium fluoride is neutral.
Ammonium sulfate :D
It's the element Lithium, it's on the periodic table of the elements.
No it is insoluble, though very soluble in water.
Chlorine is soluable, potassium however I think not. KClO3 is an ionic compound though.
No, it is hardly soluble in sodium hydroxide though it is amphoteric. It's better in (hydrochloric) acid.
Like dissolves like. So organic compounds are generally soluble in organic solvents whereas inorganic compounds are more soluble in inorganic solvents (though there are plenty of exceptions to this).
Fluorides are possible toxins though this is dependent on the fluoride as well as it's solubility and reactivity.Read more: What_is_fluoride
No Lithium is an alkali metal, not a silicate, though it is commercially important.
No sulfur hexafluoride is NOT polar. Even though it may be assumption that since fluoride is very electronegative between each S-F bond, the structure of the compound is octahedral. With this in mind, the bond electronegeativity cancels out and the compound remains non polar. The shape is symetrical which allows the compound to have equal charge distribution.
Even though it reacts with water, And reacts with your brain. Chemistry still sucks, And Lithium is to blame!
Lithium is an element, however "Holmium" is not you may be mistaking Holmium for Helium though