Salt water can be converted to fresh water by freezing and removing the ice crystals, distillation or by reverse osmosis.
If you dissolve salt in water you have not changed the materials chemically.
Everything has to be cleaned, substrate changed, and the tank has to be made "safe for salt" There must be no metal that can come into contact with salt water.
When salt is dissolved in water, it forms a solution where the salt molecules are evenly dispersed throughout the water molecules. This is a physical change as the salt and water molecules remain the same, only their arrangement has changed.
When salt water has evaporated, it has undergone a physical change since the salt and water both retain their chemical configuration, only have changed their form.
It is a physical change because salt is not changed chemically.
no it can not because the minerals in the ocean are at a higher level then fresh water.
The independent variable in this experiment is the amount of table salt added to the boiling water. The effect of adding salt to the water is to raise the boiling point of the water, therefore increasing the temperature at which the water boils.
It should not make any difference. the salt concentration in a salt water pool is the same as the salt concentration in your body. I think you should look for answers elsewhere.
When salt is added to water, the equilibrium of the system is disturbed due to the dissolution of the salt. This disruption leads to an increase in the concentration of ions in the solution, which can affect properties such as boiling point, freezing point, and osmotic pressure. Eventually, a new equilibrium is established between the dissolved salt and the water molecules.
Common table salt when added to water is an example of a solute. For example, salt crystals (the solute) are the part of salt water (a solution) which has changed its state when added to water (the solvent).
It was really copper, but over time, the salt water got to it and turned it green.
Normally the salt (sodium chloride) in a salt-water pool does not need changing. it does however need to be toped up once in a while to maintain the correct salt level for the chlorinator. However if the saltwater system is being changed to a Magnesium & potassium chloride system some water may have to be sacrificed to lower the sodium chloride level. it would be best to seek advice from chlorinator manufacturers on the technicalities in this case.