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it all depends on which crystals you mean, salt crystals can dissolve in both hot and cold water they dissolve quicker in hot water as the hot water acts as a catalyst for this
Some crystals do, such as sugar. Others, like salt, don't depend on the temperature of the liquid. All crystals are different.
Salt water is not abrasive unless it has crystals of undissolved salt in it.
Of course you would first need to define cold, but the simple answer is that when water gets colder, it retracts (only until about 0 degree Celsius) and therefor there is not space enough for the salt to bind to the water.
Yes it does. The water evaporates off leaving salt crystals behind. Depending on how fast you evaporate the water, different sizes of crystals are formed. The slower you evaporate, the larger the crystals.
it all depends on which crystals you mean, salt crystals can dissolve in both hot and cold water they dissolve quicker in hot water as the hot water acts as a catalyst for this
no you do not
It depends how saturated the salt solution is. The more saturated with salt, the faster crystals will form.
Answering "http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_Dissolves_salt_or_sugar"
When mixed, it is a solution. If left to sit, the salt can partially distill out of the solution. If the water is left to evaporate, there will be crystals.
the water evaporates leaving salt crystal
because they both are pagal
Some crystals do, such as sugar. Others, like salt, don't depend on the temperature of the liquid. All crystals are different.
Table salt is made of many tiny crystals. When you mix these salt crystals with water, they dissolve, losing their crystalline form. When the water evaporates, the salt crystals form once again.
dilute salt in water to form a solution, then evaporate the water and you are left with salt crystals - gamemaster12321
Yes, if you boil salt water away, you will be left with salt crystals.
evaporate the water and then the salt crystals will be left.