Potassium oxalate is soluble as are all potassium compounds.
Like (almost) ALL kinds of (inorganic) potassium salts it is soluble
nope! its soluble in water (though poorly) and is also soluble in nitric acid
Ammonium sulfate is soluble in water.
It is soluble in water.
Naphthalene and potassium sulfate can be separated through a process called recrystallization. Since naphthalene is soluble in organic solvents like ethanol or acetone but potassium sulfate is soluble in water, one can dissolve the mixture in a suitable solvent. Afterward, the solution can be filtered to remove the insoluble potassium sulfate, and naphthalene can be recovered by evaporating the solvent. Alternatively, differences in melting points could also be exploited, as naphthalene has a melting point of about 80°C, while potassium sulfate remains solid at that temperature.
Like (almost) ALL kinds of (inorganic) potassium salts it is soluble
yes, potassium sulfate is a white solid, as long as you keep it cooler than 1956° F.
nope! its soluble in water (though poorly) and is also soluble in nitric acid
Ammonium sulfate is soluble in water.
It is soluble in water.
in hydrated form it is soluble but in anhydrous form it is insoluble
No, potassium sulfate is not soluble in hexane as it is a polar compound and hexane is a nonpolar solvent. Solubility depends on the nature of the solute and solvent; in this case, the polarity mismatch makes potassium sulfate insoluble in hexane.
It is soluble, like Sodium Chloride or common salt
Soluble substances: table salt in water, sugar in water, potassium carbonate in water, etc.Insoluble substances: table salt in acetone, silver in ethanol, barium sulfate in water.
Barium sulfate is insoluble in water, while copper sulfate is soluble. This is due to differences in the solubility rules for these ions in water. Barium sulfate forms a highly insoluble precipitate, while copper sulfate dissociates into its ions in water.
One method to separate barium sulfate from potassium chloride is by precipitation. Adding a solution containing a soluble barium compound like barium nitrate will cause barium sulfate to precipitate out. The resulting mixture can then be filtered to separate the solid barium sulfate from the potassium chloride solution.
No, all the sulfate compounds are highly soluble in water.