मराठी

Salts

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Topics

  • Introduction of Salts
  • Family of Salts
  • pH Value of a Salt

Introduction of Salts:

A salt is a compound formed when the negative ion (anion) of an acid combines with the positive ion (cation) of a base during a neutralisation reaction. Salts, such as sodium chloride (table salt), are commonly used in daily life. In their solid state, salts are crystalline, and when dissolved in water or melted, they dissociate into positively and negatively charged ions. This property makes salts excellent electrolytes, enabling them to conduct electricity in their molten or dissolved states. Salts play an essential role in chemical reactions, biology, and various industrial applications.

Family of Salts:

  1. Chloride Family: Salts in this family contain chloride ions (Cl⁻) as their negative radicals. For Example: Sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, aluminum chloride, etc.
  2. Sulphate Family: These salts have sulphate ions (SO₄²⁻) as their negative radicals. For Example: Potassium sulphate, sodium sulphate, magnesium sulphate, copper sulphate, aluminum sulphate, etc.
  3. Nitrate Family: Salts in this group contain nitrate ions (NO₃⁻) as their negative radicals. For Example: Sodium nitrate, potassium nitrate, calcium nitrate, aluminum nitrate, copper nitrate, etc.
  4. Sodium Family: These salts have sodium ions (Na⁺) as their positive radicals. For Example: Sodium chloride, sodium sulphate, sodium nitrate, etc.
  5. Copper Family: Salts in this family include copper ions (Cu²⁺) as their positive radicals. For Example: Copper chloride, copper nitrate, copper sulphate, etc.
  6. Carbonate Family: Salts in this group have carbonate ions (CO₃²⁻) as their negative radicals. For Example: Sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, copper carbonate, etc.

pH Value of a Salt:

Salts are compounds formed by the neutralisation reaction between an acid and a base. In water, salts ionise to produce cations and anions, which can interact with water to influence the solution's pH. Based on their pH value, salts are classified as:

  1. Neutral Salts: pH = 7 (e.g., sodium chloride, potassium sulphate).
  2. Acidic Salts: pH < 7 (e.g., ammonium chloride, ammonium sulphate).
  3. Basic Salts: pH > 7 (e.g., sodium carbonate, ammonium carbonate).

Examples of Salts and Their pH:

  • Sodium chloride: pH = 7, neutral.
  • Sodium carbonate: pH ≈ 11, basic.
  • Ammonium chloride: pH ≈ 6, acidic.
  • Potassium sulphate: pH = 7, neutral.
  • Ammonium sulphate: pH ≈ 5.5, acidic.
  • Potassium chloride: pH = 7, neutral.
  • Ammonium carbonate: pH ≈ 7.8, slightly basic.
  • Sodium sulphate: pH = 7, neutral.
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Video Tutorials

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Shaalaa.com | Acids, Bases and Salts, Lecture 3, Class 10, Chemistry Rxn with carbonates bicarbonates

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Acids, Bases and Salts, Lecture 3, Class 10, Chemistry Rxn with carbonates bicarbonates [00:09:55]
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