Yes, salt is an ionic compound and water is a polar covalent solvent.
Yes salt dissolves in water
there is salt in salt water and little salt in fresh water
there is no salt water in the candy "salt water taffy." it is just the name/brand.
The solvent is water, the solute is salt; solvent and solute form a solution.
Solute, because it is the minor component in the solution and it is what dissolves in the solvent. For example: Salt Water - The salt is the solute that dissoles in the solvent, which is water.
Salt Water
melt salt would dissolve
Yes
Yes. Cold water does disslove.
The salt will dissolve. I'm not sure about the sand though. The gravel is just little pieces of rock, so it won't disslove. Try it and see if the sand dissolves, because I don't know if it does!
greater area exposed to the water
Limewater IS dissolved in water. Limestone dissolves in water because the mineral calcite it comprises of is soluble. This is why limestone dissolves in water.
Sodium Chloride (table salt) is an ionic compound that has a high melting point. The higher the temperature, the more you have reached its melting point, that means the higher the temperature the more the salt will be dissolved. (as long as the temperature is about 801 degrease Celsius, or 1474 degrease Fahrenheit, because that is table salts melting point.)
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yes
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
I think that leaving it in water too long takes away its positive affects- just swallow it to be sure.
Salt water