1
answer
0
watching
147
views
27 Nov 2019

(General rules of solubility)
Experimentally observed facts have led to the establishment ofrules used to predict the solubility of common compounds in water.The rules can be stated as follows:
Compounds that contain , , , and are always soluble with noparticular exceptions. Similarly, compounds that contain and arealways soluble.
The halides , , and form soluble salts with all the possiblecations except for , , and .
All the compounds that contain will be soluble except for compoundsthat have , , , and .
All the compounds that contain will be insoluble except for thosecompounds that pair with the alkali metal cations, , , , and.
All the compounds that contain or will be insoluble except forthose compounds that pair with the alkali metal cations and .
-----------------------
If you carry out the reaction between table salt () and copper(II)sulfate () in of water, the salt copper(II) sulfate will behavesimilarly to the salts given in the tab named Slightly SolubleSalts.
Enter the formula for the precipitate, without the phase, that willbe formed. If no precipitate is formed, simply type "noreaction" inthe answer box.

Express your answer as a chemical formula.

For unlimited access to Homework Help, a Homework+ subscription is required.

Nestor Rutherford
Nestor RutherfordLv2
7 Mar 2019

Unlock all answers

Get 1 free homework help answer.
Already have an account? Log in
discord banner image
Join us on Discord
Chemistry Study Group
Join now

Related textbook solutions

Related questions

Weekly leaderboard

Start filling in the gaps now
Log in