Change set

Pick exam & year, then Go.

Question map
Not attempted Correct Incorrect Bookmarked
Loading…
Q45 (CAPF/2012) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Applied everyday chemistry Answer Verified

Which one among the following salts causes hardness to the water?

Result
Your answer:  ·  Correct: A
Explanation

Water hardness is primarily caused by the presence of dissolved multivalent metallic cations, specifically calcium (Ca²⁺) and magnesium (Mg²⁺) ions. These ions are introduced into water through the dissolution of minerals like bicarbonates, chlorides, and sulfates [4]. Hardness is categorized into two types: temporary and permanent. Temporary hardness is specifically caused by dissolved calcium bicarbonate and magnesium bicarbonate. When water containing these bicarbonates is boiled, they decompose into insoluble carbonates (like calcium carbonate), which precipitate out of the solution [1]. Permanent hardness is caused by sulfates and chlorides of calcium and magnesium [4]. While calcium carbonate is the standard unit for expressing hardness, it is relatively insoluble in water and is the precipitate formed during softening, rather than the dissolved salt causing the initial hardness [1]. Sodium and potassium salts do not contribute to water hardness [3].

Sources

  1. [3] https://www.griet.ac.in/nodes/EC_UNIT_1.pdf
  2. [4] https://uptti.ac.in/classroom-content/data/Unit-1_Water%20and%20its%20treatment.pdf
  3. [1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/engineering/carbonate-hardness
  4. [2] https://www.mtnregionalwaterutah.gov/files/882bc66a4/MRW-Water-Hardness.pdf
How others answered
Each bar shows the % of students who chose that option. Green bar = correct answer, blue outline = your choice.
Community Performance
Out of everyone who attempted this question.
31%
got it right
✓ Thank you! We'll review this.

SIMILAR QUESTIONS

5 Cross-Linked PYQs

UPSC repeats concepts across years. Login to see how this question connects to 5 others.

Login with Google