It is Lead chloride.
No. Potassium chloride (KCl) is soluble in water.
Some chlorides are soluble (NaCl), some chlorides are insoluble (AgCl) in water.
Add the mixture to water, Barium chloride is soluble and will dissolve while Silver chloride is insoluble and will remain in solid form.
It reacts with water to form the insoluble bismuth oxychloride (BiOCl). BiCl3 is soluble in acidic water.
By soluble I presume you mean soluble in water and, in that case, the answer is, some are and some are not. For example, Ferric Oxide Fe2O3, usually known as rust, is not soluble in water, whereas Sodium Chloride NaCl, usually known as table salt, is soluble in water.
Insoluble. Metallic sulfides are very poorly soluble in water.
Sodium chloride is soluble in water; silver chloride is not soluble.
Dissolve in water NH4Cl (very soluble) and filter out the insoluble metallic Zn particles.
yes it is soluble in water for certain limit..!! when the soluble capacity of the water exceeds beyond the standard value.. sodium chloride becomes insoluble..!!
No that is not true. It is soluble in water.
Most metallic chlorides are soluble in water.
Rubidium chloride is soluble in water,
You are misinformed, Lithium Chloride IS soluble in water.
Silver chloride
Yes, barium chloride (BaCl2) is soluble in water.
Hexane is not a polar molecule, and thus is not soluble in water. Methylene chloride is not soluble in water for the same reason.
Potassium chloride is not soluble in xylene.