baoh2
Yes, because it is a base.
Barium hydroxide IS soluble in water, and it has the formula Ba(OH)2, not ba(oh)2.
Ba(OH)2 (barium hydroxide) would increase the pH of water when dissolved because it is a strong base that releases hydroxide ions, which react with water to produce more OH- ions, thus increasing the pH. NaCl (sodium chloride) would not significantly affect the pH of water when dissolved because it dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions, which do not influence the pH of the solution.
This solution is impossible because the solubility of Ba(OH)2 at 20 0C is only 38,9 g/L.
Yes, ( \text{Ba(OH)_2} ) is considered an electrolyte because it dissociates into ions (( \text{Ba}^{2+} ) and ( 2\text{OH}^- )) when dissolved in water, allowing it to conduct electricity.
NaOH is a strong base because it dissociates completely in water to produce hydroxide ions. NH3 is a weak base because it only partially ionizes in water. Ba(OH)2 is a strong base because it dissociates completely to produce hydroxide ions. HF is a weak base because it only partially ionizes in water.
Ba(OH)2 is an ionic compound. Barium hydroxide dissociates in water to form barium ions (Ba2+) and hydroxide ions (OH-), which are held together by ionic bonds.
There is one oxygen atom in each unit of the compound Ba(OH)2.
Salt water is a solution of salt, containing of course salt.
salt is not from salt water
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it