Want this question answered?
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
It will be saturated salt solution with salt crystals at the bottom of the container.
a salt solution is homogenous.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
1. Filtering the liquid sand remain on the filter. 2. The solution containing salt pass the filter; after the evaporation of water crystallized NaCl is obtained.
suppose there is a mixture of salt and water..salt completely dissolves in water so after a certain time we will not be able to see salt particles in water..to recover the salt from the solution we can evaporate water and salt residues will be left behind.
Probably the simplest method is to dissolve the salt in water, filter the sulphur out (then evaporate the salt solution to recover the salt if desired.)
Saline solutions are ones that contain salt...if you evaporate a saline solution, you recover the dissolved salt, therefore an evaporated saline solution tastes like the salt that it is.
Yes. If the solution is close to saturation, dropping the temperature will cause the solution to become supersaturated and salt will begin to precipitate out. Of course you could also separate it by boiling off the water and feeding the vapor through a condenser to recover nearly pure water while leaving the salt behind.
The salt content of a salt solution can be found from the solutions' molarity. Any solution with a salt content can be called a salt solution. There is no one set standard which determines the amount of salt which must be in a solution for it to be a salt solution.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
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.
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.
Solvent extraction is the best method. Lets look at the components. We know salt is very soluble in water yet sand is not. Add the mixture to water and stir well. Filter it. The material left in the filter paper will be sand and the solution recovered will be salt solution - you can recover the solid salt vis evaporation.
It will be saturated salt solution with salt crystals at the bottom of the container.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.