ya mum
But merely boiling the water will not eliminate the fluoride and can in fact concentrate it because you have the same amount of fluoride in less water. You can distill the water. Meaning you can boil the water then capture the steam, which will be pure. But the process is expensive. You need special filters to remove the fluoride.
There would be 4.38 moles of fluoride ions in 1.46 moles of aluminum fluoride, as the formula for aluminum fluoride is AlF3 with three fluoride ions per molecule of aluminum fluoride.
No, The fluoride ion is a reduced form of fluorine.
Fluoride is in many products available to the public. Fluoride is also known as Acidulated Phosphate Fluoride, Stannous Fluoride, Hydrogen Fluoride, Calcarea Fluorica, and Atomic Number 9.
Fluoride is difficult to deal with because it can be toxic in large amounts, causing health issues like dental fluorosis and skeletal fluorosis. Controlling fluoride levels in water supplies and other sources requires careful monitoring and regulation to ensure it is within safe limits for consumption. Additionally, removing fluoride from water can be expensive and technologically challenging.
Sodium fluoride is the only compound in sodium fluoride.
Lead fluoride, PbF2
Distillation is the best method for removing fluoride from water. Activated carbon filters have been know to reduce fluoride but not efficiently, there performance depends on several variables, including pH and the general mineral content of the water being filtered. Reverse Osmosis is another method used to remove fluoride but it is an expensive choice at present.
The anion fluoride is (F)-.
No. Fluoride is not flammable.
Zinc fluoride has a charge of +2 for zinc and -1 for fluoride, so the formula for zinc fluoride is ZnF2.
It's potassium fluorine (fluoride? dunno about the spelling. . . DX) Hope this helps!