28 entries

Solubility Rules for Ionic Compounds

Quick-reference solubility rules for predicting whether ionic compounds dissolve in water. Essential for precipitation reactions and net ionic equations.

Ion Solubility Exceptions
Na⁠+, K⁠+, Li⁠+, NH⁠4+Always solubleNo exceptions
NO⁠3- (nitrate)Always solubleNo exceptions
CH⁠3COO⁠- (acetate)Always solubleAg⁠+ acetate is slightly soluble
MnO⁠4- (permanganate)Always solubleNo exceptions
ClO⁠4- (perchlorate)Always solubleNo exceptions
ClO⁠3- (chlorate)Always solubleNo exceptions
ClO⁠2- (chlorite)SolubleNo common exceptions
ClO⁠- (hypochlorite)SolubleNo common exceptions
Cr⁠2O⁠72- (dichromate)SolubleNo common exceptions
NO⁠2- (nitrite)SolubleAg⁠+ nitrite is slightly soluble
F⁠- (fluoride)SolubleInsoluble with Mg⁠2+, Ca⁠2+, Sr⁠2+, Ba⁠2+, Pb⁠2+
Cl⁠- (chloride)SolubleInsoluble with Ag⁠+, Pb⁠2+, Hg⁠22+
Br⁠- (bromide)SolubleInsoluble with Ag⁠+, Pb⁠2+, Hg⁠22+
I⁠- (iodide)SolubleInsoluble with Ag⁠+, Pb⁠2+, Hg⁠22+
SCN⁠- (thiocyanate)SolubleInsoluble with Ag⁠+, Cu⁠+
SO⁠42- (sulfate)SolubleInsoluble with Ba⁠2+, Pb⁠2+, Ca⁠2+ (slightly), Sr⁠2+ (slightly)
S⁠2O⁠32- (thiosulfate)SolubleNo common exceptions
HSO⁠4- (hydrogen sulfate)SolubleNo common exceptions
H⁠2PO⁠4- (dihydrogen phosphate)SolubleNo common exceptions
HCO⁠3- (hydrogen carbonate)SolubleNo common exceptions
OH⁠- (hydroxide)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+, Ba⁠2+, Ca⁠2+ (slightly), Sr⁠2+ (slightly)
SO⁠32- (sulfite)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+
CO⁠32- (carbonate)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+
PO⁠43- (phosphate)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+
CrO⁠42- (chromate)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+
C⁠2O⁠42- (oxalate)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+
S⁠2- (sulfide)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+, and Group 2 metals
CN⁠- (cyanide)InsolubleSoluble with Na⁠+, K⁠+, NH⁠4+

Important Notes

  • "Soluble" means the compound dissolves to form at least a 0.1 M solution at 25°C.
  • "Slightly soluble" means the compound dissolves to between 0.01 M and 0.1 M — too soluble to call insoluble, but not freely soluble. Examples: CaSO₄, AgCH₃COO, PbCl₂ in hot water.
  • "Insoluble" means the compound forms less than a 0.01 M solution. Very small amounts may still dissolve (Ksp).
  • When two soluble ionic compounds are mixed, a precipitate forms only if the product ion combination is insoluble.
  • Acidic (hydrogen) salts are generally more soluble than their fully deprotonated counterparts: HSO₄⁻, HCO₃⁻, and H₂PO₄⁻ salts are all soluble, while SO₃²⁻, CO₃²⁻, and PO₄³⁻ are mostly insoluble. Caution: HPO₄²⁻ (hydrogen phosphate) does NOT follow this trend — CaHPO₄ and BaHPO₄ are insoluble.
  • Lead(II) chloride (PbCl₂) is insoluble in cold water but slightly soluble in hot water.
  • Silver acetate is slightly soluble (borderline case).
  • Fluoride salts of Group 2 metals are notable exceptions to the general halide solubility trend.
  • The chlorine oxyanions (ClO₄⁻, ClO₃⁻, ClO₂⁻, ClO⁻) are all soluble, derived from perchloric, chloric, chlorous, and hypochlorous acid respectively.
  • SCN⁻ (thiocyanate) forms a characteristic blood-red complex with Fe³⁺, used as a qualitative test for iron(III) ions.