Strontium bromide and potassium sulfate will produce a precipitate of strontium sulfate.
K2SO4(aq) + SrI2(aq)=SrSO4(aq) + 2kI(aq)
Strontium Sulfate is the sulfate salt of Strontium. It is a white, odorless crystaline substance powder and occurs in nature as the mineral Celestine. So your answer is Celestine.
Because strontium sulfate is much less soluble in water than strontium chloride, sodium chloride, or sodium sulfate, this reaction is: Na2SO4 (aq) + SrCl2 (aq) => 2 NaCl (aq) + SrSO4 (s).
Sodium sulphate increases the concentration of sulphate ions. So strontium sulphate solubility decreases.
Magnesium Oxide Strontium Sulphate has a melting point of 1606°C while Magnesium Oxide has a melting point of 2852°C
YES.
Yes, I know strontium iodate does.
yes!!
NiS nickel sulfide
2 KBr + (NH4)2SO4 -> 2 NH4Br + K2SO4
A flame test.
i think either potassium(II) sulfate or potassium sulfate
The question statement is true (except that the first instance, but not the second instance, of "dissolved" is misspelled.)
K2SO4(aq) + SrI2(aq)=SrSO4(aq) + 2kI(aq)
A precipitate is when two ions that mix together in a solution are then insoluble when they bind together in the solution (ususally water). If a precipitate will form is governed mostly by solubility rules that can be looked up.
Strontium Sulfate is the sulfate salt of Strontium. It is a white, odorless crystaline substance powder and occurs in nature as the mineral Celestine. So your answer is Celestine.
Yes - white precipitate of Barium Sulfate