Chromates of alkali metals are soluble in water. But chromates of Alkaline earth metals, transition metals and post-transition(poor) metals are mostly insoluble in water.
No
Due to insoluble Pb2+ ions
due to the solubility product constant(ksp)
Silver Chromate Ag=Silver CrO4= Chromate(a polyatomic ion)
Cesium Chromate = Cs2CrO4
No, lead chromate is insoluble in water
It is not soluble in oils.
Silver chromate is not soluble in water.
No
yes
the answer is no because aluminum is not soluble in water.
Due to insoluble Pb2+ ions
With ions of alkali metals (like Na+ or K+ or Li+)
yes7.19 g/100 ml (20 °C)57 g/100 mL (100 °C)
due to the solubility product constant(ksp)
K2CrO4 is named potassium chromate. It is a salt combining mono atomic potassium cations and polyatomic chromate cations and is quite soluble in water. Its solutions in water are highly oxidizing.
Yes, yellow solutionDid you know that (almost) all Sodium salts are soluble in water?