Your question is really...incorrectly phrased. But anyways, to answer your question, yes. You can evaporate the liquid phase by leaving it outside in the sun to dry and it will isolate some of the salt that was present in the solution.
Salt dissolves in water forming solution.
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) will produce an acidic solution when dissolved in water.
No major effects. The salt water and the water join to become a less concentrated salt solution than the salt water but a more concentrated salt solution than the regular water.
Evaporating the copper sulfate solution to dryness can lead to the formation of copper sulfate anhydrous, which is a white powder, rather than the desired blue crystals of copper sulfate pentahydrate. Keeping some water in the solution helps in obtaining the desired pentahydrate form of copper sulfate with its distinctive blue color.
Yes, you can retrieve the salt from the salt solution by filtering and then evaporating the water. When salt dissolves in water, it separates into its constituent ions, but it does not become chemically altered. By filtering, you can separate any undissolved impurities, and then by evaporating the water, the salt will crystallize back out of the solution.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) would be left behind after evaporating the solution to dryness. This is because when sodium hydroxide (NaOH) reacts with hydrochloric acid (HCl), it forms sodium chloride and water. Evaporating the water leaves behind solid sodium chloride.
The salt content of a salt solution can be found from the solutions' molarity. Any solution with a salt content can be called a salt solution. There is no one set standard which determines the amount of salt which must be in a solution for it to be a salt solution.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
hypertonic to fresh water but hypotonic to the salt solution
In an unsaturated solution, the salt becomes more and more concentrated until the solution is completely saturated. If evaporation continues to occur, then the salt will either precipitate or the solution will become "supersaturated."