Solubilities of ionic compounds in water depend in large measure upon the difference in the strength of the ion-water attractive forces and the cation-anion attractive forces. Because these differences are usually small, they do not vary in a regular way. Thus we use
solubility rules based on experimentally-determined solubilities.
Soluble ionic compoundsAmmonium (NH4+) and Group I salts
The most common Group I cations are Na+ and K+.
Nitrate (NO3–) and ethanoate (CH3COO–) salts
Sulfate (SO42–) salts except CaSO4, BaSO4, PbSO4, SrSO4
Halide salts (Cl–, Br– and I–) except if the cation is Ag+ or Pb2+
A general observation is that ionic compounds having anions with -1 charge tend to be soluble.
Insoluble ionic compoundsHydroxides (OH–) and oxides (O2–) except if the cation is Na+, K+
Sulfides (S2–) and carbonates (CO32–) except if the cation is Na+, K+, NH4+,
Phosphates (PO43–) except if the cation is NH4+, Na+, K+
A general observation is the ionic compounds that have anions with -2 or -3 charges are insoluble.