No. Common salt is sodium chloride (NaCl), but most common salt contains a small percentage of potassium iodide (KI). Potassium iodide is a salt as well, but tastes more bitter than ordinary salt. But they mix a little bit of it in there, because a little bit of iodine is good for your thyroid gland. The two salts are mixed together, not chemically bonded together.
Iodine in the iodized salt exist as iodine salts (potassium iodide/iodate or sodium iodide/iodate).These salts are dissolved and dissociated in the organism as NaCl.
Examples: silver choride, bromide and iodide.
Chemistry is as boring as sucking donkey balls.
Iodide salts are not used in argentometric titrations because silver iodide is highly insoluble in water compared to other silver halides. This results in poor endpoint detection and low accuracy in the titration process. Additionally, the reaction between iodide ions and silver ions is reversible, making it challenging to achieve a clear and sharp endpoint.
sweat glands
Yes, three salts of group 1 elements (Lithium, Sodium Potassium and salts) are soluble in water.
The sweat glands excrete excess salts and water through the process of sweating. This helps regulate body temperature and maintain homeostasis.
Iodide is an ion formed from the element iodine, so it is not a compound.
Examples of salts: silver chloride, sodium iodide, calcium chloride, uranyl nitrate, thorium tetrafluoride, magnesium sulfate, calcium phosphate etc.
Some salts are used as food aditives (sodium sorbate, phosphates, potassium iodide, sodium citrate et.) and other are drugs.
Yes. Salts containing I- are generally soluble with the exception of AgI, PbI2, and Hg2I2.