Solubility in water pH 7: 1.86 x 10-12 g/l (25 °C)
With decreasing pH, the solubility increases.
Solubility in organic solvents Ferric phosphate is insoluble in organic solvents.
Partition co-efficient (log Pow) Not applicable (ferric phosphate is practically insoluble).
Hydrolytic stability (DT50) Not applicable (ferric phosphate is practically insoluble
in water).
Dissociation constant Not applicable (ferric phosphate is practically insoluble
in water).
Quantum yield of direct phototransformation
in water at >290 nm
Not applicable (ferric phosphate is practically insoluble in water).
The short answer is no.
no
no
diammonium hydrogen phosphate
no
No, not all phosphate salts are soluble in water. The sodium, potassium, rubidium, caesium, and ammonium phosphates are all water soluble, and most other phosphates are either slightly soluble or are insoluble.
no
The diammonium phosphate is water soluble.
no
Yes, sodium phosphate is soluble in water. It dissolves easily and forms a clear, colorless solution.
According to MSDS for this product, it is completely water soluble.
diammonium hydrogen phosphate
I think so
Iron carbonate (FeCO3) is not soluble in water.
Iron heated with lime water produces iron phosphate
Both of these salts are soluble in water.
NH4(3)PO4, which is ammonium phosphate, is soluble in water. Ammonium salts are soluble.
Iron(III) nitrate is soluble in water.