Salts — composition?
Formed from positive and negative ions.
Solubility — definition?
Max salt amount dissolvable in water at a specific T.
Soluble salts — example?
Sodium hydroxide, nitrates like silver nitrate.
Insoluble salts — example?
Calcium carbonate, barium sulfate.
Solubility at 25 ºC — trend?
Varies; generally increases with temperature.
Precipitation reaction — process?
Formation of insoluble salt from soluble reactants.
Precipitate — definition?
Poorly soluble solid formed during reactions.
Chemical equation — example?
Pb(NO₃)₂ + 2 KI → PbI₂ (s) + 2 NaNO₃.
Solubility and temperature — effect?
Most salts dissolve more as temperature rises.
Exceptions — salts?
Calcium carbonate decreases solubility with higher T.
Natural precipitation — example?
Stalactites formed from calcium carbonate deposits.
Dissolution of calcium carbonate — role?
Releases calcium bicarbonate into water.
Recrystallization — process?
Precipitation of calcium carbonate from calcium bicarbonate.
Environmental impact — example?
Acid rain dissolves limestone, forming caves.
Formation of stalactites — mechanism?
Precipitation of calcium carbonate from dripping water.
Dissolution — reaction?
Calcium carbonate + acid → calcium bicarbonate.
Recrystallization — reaction?
Calcium bicarbonate → calcium carbonate + CO₂.
Effect of temperature on solubility — general?
Usually increases, but some salts like calcium carbonate decrease.
Test your knowledge with 9 questions on Understanding Salt Solubility and Precipitation.
1. What does 'Sal Solubility' refer to?
2. Which salt's solubility decreases as temperature increases, contrary to the general trend?
Review the complete course in the revision sheet for Understanding Salt Solubility and Precipitation.
See revision sheet →Import your course and AI generates flashcards in 30 seconds.
Flashcard generator