These salts are weak electrolytes: examples are acetates, formates etc. of alkali metals.
Salts of weak acids and bases are the ionic compounds formed by the reaction between a weak base and a weak acid. For example, if acetic acid was to react with ammonium, the salt ammonium acetate would form.
Weak electrolytes are substances that partially dissociate into ions in solution. Examples include weak acids like acetic acid (CH3COOH), weak bases like ammonia (NH3), and some salts like lead(II) chloride (PbCl2).
Examples of weak bases include ammonia (NH3), methylamine (CH3NH2), and aniline (C6H5NH2). These compounds do not completely dissociate in water to release hydroxide ions but can still react with acids to form salts and water.
Examples: organic or inorganic salts, basic or acidic salts, natural or artificial salts etc.
Acids and bases are not salts.
No, a weak acid is a weak electrolyte Strong electrolytes - strong acids, bases, salts, and ionic compounds
Salts formed from strong acid and strong base are neither acidic nor basic. Salts formed from strong acid and weak base are slightly acidic. Salts formed from weak acid and strong base are slightly basic.
Examples are nitrates and nitrides.
Examples of salts: silver chloride, sodium iodide, calcium chloride, uranyl nitrate, thorium tetrafluoride, magnesium sulfate, calcium phosphate etc.
Yes this may be possible.
Yes this may be possible.
Because the soluble salts are dissociated in water solutions forming ions.