You think probable to sodium chloride and bromide.
The substance that is not soluble in water is sand. Salt, sugar, and powdered drink mix are all soluble in water and will dissolve when mixed with it.
Essentially ALL the metallic nitrates are soluble, even mercurous nitrate, perhaps the only mercurous salt that is soluble.
SodiumClorineIroncalciumMagnesiumsulfuriodine
All Sodium, Potassium, and ammonium salts are soluble in water.
You think probable to sodium chloride and bromide.
Potassium nitrate (KNO3) is the most soluble nitrate salt in water at all temperatures, due to its strong ionic bonds and interactions with water molecules.
The halogen bromine (Br) is more soluble in water at all temperatures compared to chlorine (Cl). This is due to bromine's higher molecular weight and larger atomic radius, which makes it more polarizable and allows for stronger interactions with water molecules.
Chloride ion (Cl-) salts are generally more soluble than bromide ion (Br-) salts at all temperatures. This is due to the smaller size of the chloride ion compared to the bromide ion, which allows for stronger ion-dipole interactions with water molecules.
Table salt (sodium chloride) is very soluble in water; but not all salts are soluble in water.
The substance that is not soluble in water is sand. Salt, sugar, and powdered drink mix are all soluble in water and will dissolve when mixed with it.
Essentially ALL the metallic nitrates are soluble, even mercurous nitrate, perhaps the only mercurous salt that is soluble.
Sand is not soluble in water. Sugar, salt, powder drink mix are all soluble substances that can dissolve in water.
Yes. If it dissolves in water it is soluble. Sugar, salt, soap are all soluble. Try it.
SodiumClorineIroncalciumMagnesiumsulfuriodine
All Sodium, Potassium, and ammonium salts are soluble in water.
All small and polar molecules and all ionic compounds are soluble in water.