Difference between revisions of "Salt"
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Latest revision as of 19:07, 20 April 2019
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For the compound commonly referred to as "salt" or "table salt", see sodium chloride.
Salts are ionic compounds that are produced as a result of neutralization reactions between an acid and a base. They are made of cations (positively charged ions) and anions (negatively charged ions) that neutralize each others electrical charges.
Contents
Properties
Physical
Salts are typically crystalline, with high melting points and high strength. They are usually soluble in water and are almost always solid at normal temperature and pressure. Many of these salts exist in varying degrees of hydration (inclusion of water molecules in their crystal lattice), and salts of transition metals are often brightly colored, such as those of copper, cobalt, and chromium.
Chemical
Salts usually disassociate in water very readily and are often traded and used dissolved in water.
Uses
Salts are commonly used in electrochemistry.