evaporate the water.
No. Pure water is a compound, which is a pure substance. A saltwater solution is a mixture of water and salt, and is not a pure substance.
By reversing osmosis and using pressure to push the pure water through the semipermeable membrane, leaving concentrated salt brine behind.
saltwater... :D
it depends on the brand of salt you use you need to make a batch of saltwater for yourself and find out the measurements, my brand is 2 3/4 cups salt into 5 gallons of water for a 1.024 SG.
No but you can make Saltwater edible using the Reverse Osmosis Method.
Yes. Distillation serves to separate pure water from saltwater. However, what remains is not salt, but highly-salinated water called "slurry".
The pure water is the solvent and the minerals, salts that dissolved in the water (to make salt water) are called the solute. I assumed you were talking about sea/salt water? If you are talking about common salt dissolved in water the the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
Adding impurities to a pure salt or applying a method of preparation which not lead to a pure salt.
no it will die quickly To answer you question, They will die if you immediately put them in a pure saltwater environment. You can though slowly change the salt levels and make a fish adapt to the salt. But there only a few fish that can do this and the salt can only be a certain level. So you have to get fish that can take lower level of salt. Actually either way, meaning there are probably a few saltwater fish that can live in an low salt environment. That way you complete your look.
Salt water is ions! Na + and Cl -
no it is iodized, and will be toxic.
Yes. Distillation serves to separate pure water from saltwater. However, what remains is not salt, but highly-salinated water called "slurry".