Is a combination of iron(iii) iodide and sodium hydroxide soluble in water?

1 Answer
May 19, 2018

No. They react to produce #"Fe(OH)"_3"#, an insoluble solid (precipitate).

Explanation:

Individually, yes. But when mixed, they react in a double replacement reaction to form a precipitate ( insoluble solid resulting from mixing two solutions).

Molecular equation

#"FeI"_3("aq") + "3NaOH(aq)"##rarr##"3NaI(aq) +Fe(OH)"_3darr"#

The down arrow means that the compound is a precipitate, which is an insoluble solid formed from two solutions.

So the reaction produces the precipitate iron(III) hydroxide.

Net ionic equation: includes only the ions that reacted and their product.

#"Fe"^(3+)("aq") + "3OH"^(-)("aq")"##rarr##"Fe(OH)"_3darr"#

We can tell whether an ionic compound is soluble in water by consulting solubility rules.

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