K3Fe(CN)6 is acidic or basic salt.Why?
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K3Fe(CN)6 is acidic or basic salt.Why?
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Double Salts: contain more than one anion or cation. They form when more than one salt is dissolved in a liquid and when together they crystallize in a regular pattern. Alum is an example of a double salt. Alum contains aluminum and sulphate ions. Another example would be potassium sodium tartrate. Epsom sals are an example of a double salt. A double salt is a salt that crystallizes as a single substance but ionizes as two distinct salts when dissolved, as carnallite, KMgCl3·6H2O
Complex Salts: A class of salts in which there are no detectable quantities of each of the metal ions existing in solution; an example is K3Fe(CN)6, which in solution has K+ but no Fe3+ because Fe is strongly bound in the complex ion, Fe(CN)63-.
Many of the transition metals form coordination compounds or complex salts. You can prepare a complex salt of copper: Cu(SO4).5H2O + 4NH4OH ----> Cu(NH3)4SO4. H2O + 8H2O.
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