no
even a bit of salt can make a (tiny) bit of electricity. the more salt, the more electricity
Mixing salt and water does not make electricity. However, when the salt (NaCl)ionizes in the water meaning the Na+ ions and the Cl+ separates in the water, it creates an electrolyte. The term electrolyte means that the solution of salt and water can conduct electricity.
Pure water is a poor conductor of electricity because it lacks ions for the current to flow through. To make water conductive, you can add salt or another electrolyte to it. The salt dissociates into ions in the water, allowing it to conduct electricity.
Ions, use salt.
yes electricity can pass through salt water .salt is an ionic compound which can conduct electricity
no it dosent because the salt water cuts off the electricity
Salt water
No, salt water passing through a magnet does not create electricity. In order to generate electricity, you need a conductor moving through a magnetic field, such as in a generator or dynamo. The salt water itself is not conducting electricity in this scenario.
'Electricity' is a topic, not a quantity. So your question doesn't actually make any sense. If you are asking whether salt water is a conductor, then the answer is yes.
Yes. Salt dissolves in water, producing salt water, or brine.
Yes. Solid salt does not conduct electricity, but salt water does.
Both conduct electricity well, however salt water is a better conductor due to ions available.