A 'salt', in
chemistry, is defined as the product formed from the neutralisation reaction of
acids and
bases. Salts are
ionic compounds composed of
cations (positively
charged ions) and
anions (negative ions) so that the product is electrically
neutral (without a net charge). These component ions can be
inorganic such as chloride (Cl
−), as well as
organic such as acetate (CH
3COO
−) and
monoatomic ions such as fluoride (F
−), as well as
polyatomic ions such as sulfate (SO
42−).
There are several varieties of salts. Salts that produce
hydroxide ions when dissolved in water are ''
basic salts'' and salts that produce
hydronium ions in water ''
acid salts''. ''Neutral salts'' are those that are neither acid nor basic salts.
Zwitterions contain an anionic center and a cationic center in the same
molecule but are not considered to be salts. Examples include
amino acids, many
metabolites,
peptides and
proteins.
When salts are dissolved in water, they are called
electrolytes, and are able to conduct
electricity, a property that is shared with molten salts. Mixtures of many different ions in solution—like in the
cytoplasm of
cells, in
blood,
urine, plant saps and
mineral waters— usually do not form defined salts after evaporation of the water. Therefore, their salt content is given for the respective ions.
Appearance
Color
Salts can appear to be clear and
transparent (
sodium chloride),
opaque, and even metallic and lustrous (
iron disulfide). In many cases the apparent
opacity or
transparency are only related to the difference in size of the individual
monocrystals. Since light reflects from the
grain boundaries (boundaries between crystallites), larger
crystals tend to be transparent, while
poly-crystalline aggregates look like white powders. Of course, some salts are inherently
opaque.
Salts exist in all different
colors, e.g.
yellow (sodium
chromate),
orange (
potassium dichromate),
red (
mercury sulfide),
mauve (
cobalt chloride hexahydrate),
blue (
copper sulfate pentahydrate,
ferric hexacyanoferrate),
green (
nickel oxide),
colorless (
magnesium sulfate),
white, and
black (
manganese dioxide). Most
minerals and inorganic
pigments as well as many synthetic organic
dyes are salts.
Taste
Different salts can elicit all five
basic tastes, e.g. salty (
sodium chloride), sweet (
lead diacetate; but which will cause lead poisoning if ingested), sour (
potassium bitartrate),
bitter (
magnesium sulfate), and
umami or savory (
monosodium glutamate).
Odor
Salts of strong acids and strong bases ("
strong salts") are non-
volatile and odorless, while salts of either weak acids or weak bases ("
weak salts") may smell after the
conjugate acid (e.g. acetates like acetic acid (
vinegar) and cyanides like hydrogen cyanide (
almonds) or the conjugate base (e.g. ammonium salts like
ammonia) of the component ions. That slow, partial decomposition is usually accelerated by presence of water, since
hydrolysis is the other half of the
reversible reaction equation of formation of
weak salts.
Nomenclature

Various salt minerals

Chemical composition of sea salt
The name of a salt starts with the name of the cation (e.g. ''sodium'' or ''ammonium'') followed by the name of the anion (e.g. ''chloride'' or ''acetate''). Salts are often referred to only by the name of the cation (e.g. ''sodium salt'' or ''ammonium salt'') or by the name of the anion (e.g. ''chloride'' or ''acetate'').
Common salt-forming cations include:
★
ammonium NH
4+
★
calcium Ca
2+
★
iron Fe
2+ and Fe
3+
★
magnesium Mg
2+
★
potassium K
+
★
pyridinium C
5H
5NH
+
★
quaternary ammonium NR
4+
★
sodium Na
+
Common salt-forming anions (and the name of the parent acids in parentheses) include:
★
acetate CH
3COO
− (
acetic acid)
★
carbonate CO
32− (
carbonic acid)
★
chloride Cl
− (
hydrochloric acid)
★
citrate HOC(COO
−)(CH
2COO
−)
2 (
citric acid)
★
cyanide C≡N
− (
hydrogen cyanide)
★
hydroxide OH
− (
water)
★
nitrate NO
3− (
nitric acid)
★
nitrite NO
2− (
nitrous acid)
★
oxide O
2− (
water)
★
phosphate PO
43− (
phosphoric acid)
★
sulfate SO
42− (
sulfuric acid)
Formation
Salts are formed by a
chemical reaction between:
★ A
base and an
acid, e.g.
NH3 +
HCl →
NH4Cl.
★ A
metal and an
acid, e.g.
Mg +
H2SO4 →
MgSO4 +
H2.
★ A
base and an
acid anhydride, e.g. 2
NaOH +
Cl2O → 2
NaClO +
H2O
★ An
acid and an
basic anhydride, e.g. 2
HNO3 +
Na2O → 2
NaNO3 +
H2O
Salts can also form if solutions of different salts are mixed, their ions recombine, and the new salt is insoluble and precipitates (see:
solubility equilibrium).
References
★
Mark Kurlansky (2002). ''Salt: A World History''. Walker Publishing Company. ISBN 0-14-200161-9.
See also
★
Acid salt
★
Alkali salts
★
Edible salt
★
Electrolyte
★
Halide
★
Ionic bonds
★
Kosher salt
★
Natron
★
Old Salt Route
★
Road salt
★
Salting the earth is the deliberate massive use of salt to render a soil unsuitable for cultivation and thus discourage habitation.
★
Sodium
★
Table salt
★
Zwitterion
★
Salinity
★
hypertension