Always remember that salts are formed by ions:
Common salt-forming cations include:
ammonium NH4+
calcium Ca2+
iron Fe2+ and Fe 3+
magnesium Mg2+
potassium K+
pyridinium C5H5NH+
quaternary ammonium NR4+
sodium Na+
Common salt-forming anions (and the name of the parent acids in parentheses) include:
acetate CH3COO− (acetic acid)
carbonate CO32− (carbonic acid)
chloride Cl− (hydrochloric acid)
citrate HOC(COO−)(CH2COO−)2 (citric acid)
cyanide C≡N− (hydrogen cyanide)
hydroxide OH− (water)
nitrate NO3− (nitric acid)
nitrite NO2− (nitrous acid)
oxide O2− (water)
phosphate PO43− (phosphoric acid)
sulfate SO42− (sulfuric acid)
2006-06-14 07:26:32
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answer #1
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answered by Drewy-D 4
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Black salt
Fleur de Sel de Guérande
Grey salt
Hawaiian sea salt
Kosher salt
Lite salt
Pickling Salt
Popcorn Salt
Pretzel Salt
Rock Salt
Salt substitutes
Sea salt
Seasoned salt
Sour salt
Table salt
2006-06-14 14:15:22
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answer #2
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answered by aniuska_81 2
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play a match game with the periodic table or search wikipedia. a salt is a metal and a non-metal so just remember to balance charges. if you're looking for commercial salts search wikipedia.
2006-06-14 15:26:55
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answer #3
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answered by shiara_blade 6
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Not possible there are hundreds of millions of them, billions if you include the organics too.
2006-06-14 14:13:04
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answer #4
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answered by ag_iitkgp 7
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salts
try this
2006-06-14 14:12:33
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answer #5
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answered by silverpearl 4
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