Either ya taste it or ya magnify it cuz it's a cube.
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1. After the taste.
2. After the products of some chemical reactions.
3. After a crystallographic study.
4. After a chemical analysis.
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
- salts are ionic compounds - salts are products of neutralization reactions
Some salts are shiny.
- some salts as NaCl can be melted - other salts as Na2CO3 are thermally decomposed, obtaining a metal oxide
All salts make crystals.
Examples: uranyl nitrate, sodium acetate, copper chloride.
Various salts are added to the mix:Copper salts - blueStrontium salts - redSodium salts - yellowBarium salts - greenCalcium salts - orangeCobalt salts - blueCryolite - yellowLithium salts - bright red
- carbonates are salts.- oxides are...oxides not salts- hydrogencarbonates are salts
i'm no chemist .. but u could maybe add some kind of alkali and see if u can identify the resulting salts ? ..
They are ionic salts.
Radioisotopes are not salts but salts may contain radioisotopes.
Examples: organic or inorganic salts, basic or acidic salts, natural or artificial salts etc.
bath salts
This is a mixture of salts.
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
Guanidinium salts are salts derived from guanidine - CHN(NH2)2.
- salts are ionic compounds - salts are products of neutralization reactions