Both seawater and sand are substances. Solid, water or gas - each is a substance. Table salt could be called 'sandy' or 'like sand' in appearance and texture, but is made of different elements.
Table salt is a substance. All things made of real physical matter are substances.
Yes, salts are chemical substances; for example table salt is sodium chloride (NaCl).
Technically, "salt water" is a solution, not a substance.
Yes table salt is a substance, but not a pure substance, it is a substance which is a compound. All things are generically substances.
Because it is not an element
Sodium Chloride or NaCl
True because when you mix chloride and sodium you get a chemical change, which in turn creates a new substance.
true
salt. Answer is true
Anything processed for consumption usually has more than one chemical in it; this is true even for ordinary table salt that has been bought at a grocery store. A ranulated sugar atom itself is a compound whose name is sucrose though there are many types of sugar molecules. Also, a substance can be a mixture.
No. For example, ice to water.
True because when you mix chloride and sodium you get a chemical change, which in turn creates a new substance.
True because when you mix chloride and sodium you get a chemical change, which in turn creates a new substance.
Sodium Cloride
The one thing that is true of a substance is that it is defined as a particular type of matter that has uniform properties to it.Examples include water, carbon dioxide and table salt.
The one thing that is true of a substance is that it is defined as a particular type of matter that has uniform properties to it.Examples include water, carbon dioxide and table salt.
true
Any mineral containing fluoride, chloride, bromide or iodide can be called a halide. You may be thinking of halite, which is a mineral form of sodium chloride, the same compound we find in table salt.
Pure water has its salts removed and one molecule of water contains two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Insulators, on the other hand, are non conducting materials that support only insignificant amounts of electric current. ... Common table salt (NaCl) is one of them. For example, solid sodium chloride (NaCl, or table salt) does not conduct electricity; it is an insulator.
it is not true it is a chemical reaction
It depends. Some table salt is pure, or nearly pure, sodium chloride. An increasing amount of table salt is being sold with iodine added to it, which makes this "iodized" salt not a pure substance. Table sugar is usually pure, or nearly pure, sucrose. It's usually pure enough to be considered a pure substance. Refined sugar and refined salt (without additives or impurities) are pure substances.
it adds flavor :)
Yes, it is true.