Sodium chloride is very soluble in water.
274g seawater x 3.5gNaCl/100g seawater =9.6g NaCl
The most important salt in seawater is sodium chloride, NaCl.
Yes, salt dissolves in seawater, so it is a solute.
There are several salts in sea water, but the most abundant is ordinary table salt or Sodium Chloride (NaCl). Sodium Chloride, like other salts, dissolves in water into its ions, so this is really a question about which ions are present in the greatest concentration.
This concentration of NaCl is 2,6 g NaCl/100 mL solution.
The most important is sodium chloride - NaCl.
a molecule dissolves when ions are created. example: NaCl dissolves into Na+ and Cl-
The main salt in seawater is sodium chloride (NaCl)
When NaCl is added to water, you would observe that it dissolves quite readily.
Of course, the salt (NaCl)
Salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) is extracted from salt mines or seawater.
Halite (NaCl) is extracted by mining or from seawater by crystallization/recrystallization.