evaporating the water, the salt has a much later boiling point than the water and will be left behind
When salt is dissolved a water sodium chloride solution is obtained.
No, a salt is a compound. A salt maybe dissolved in water and made into a solution but as salt is not a solution per se.
The separated salt is a crystalline solid; the dissolved salt is dissociated in ions.
When salt is dissolved in water, it is in a dissolved state where the salt particles break apart into ions. This creates a solution where the salt ions are surrounded by water molecules.
If you dissolve the salt and the sand in water the sand will stay beind and the salt would dissappear. But if you want the salt back you can evaporate it off, by boiling the water. (with the dissolved salt in it)
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
Salt
The separated salt is a crystalline solid; the dissolved salt is dissociated in ions.
The separated salt is a crystalline solid; the dissolved salt is dissociated in ions.
The salt would be an electrolyte.
When salt has dissolved, the reading of the balance will remain the same as before the salt dissolved. The mass of the salt is still present in the solution, even though it is no longer visible as solid particles.
Brine.In your example, the salt is the solute while the water is the solvent.