Saltwater is a neutral one. So you can use a red litmus paper.
by boiling the mixture
Yes, by evapouration to dryness, to get the salt. Then condensational process to get the fresh water.
If you compress and cool an ammonia-oxygen gas mixture, the ammonia will condense and become a liquid. By slowly venting the container in which the mixture is held, the oxygen will escape and leave the liquid ammonia in the container. Ammonia and oxygen had formed a physical mixture in the container, and by performing the physical process described, the two can be separated.
There are not different "types" of ammonia. Ammonia is a gas and when you buy ammonia usually it is absorbed in water at different strengths. You may see ammonia sold as ".88" liquid for instance. The ammonia is used in conjunction with water and hydrogen in an ammonia cycle refrigeration plant. The ammonia/hydrogen is released into the evaporator (cold side) of the fridge. The ammonia boils off to a gas (boiling point of ammonia, in open atmosphere, is -33 oC -the pressure in system keeps it liquid). The Hydrogen/ammonia gasses leave the evaporator and are separated by absorbing the ammonia in water. The hydrogen rises back to the top of the system and the ammonia solution falls to the bottom. The only thing left to do is separate the ammonia and water by heating it (distillation) so that the cycle can be repeated. The purpose of the hydrogen the system is to control the boiling point (vapour pressure) of the ammonia.
You cannot. Unless you have a really big machine that can separate ionic compounds and take the salt away from the water...
For example, evaporation can be used to separate saltwater and sugar and water.
There are many uses with salt.Sow have to separate it.
Vaporize it with light. (like SUN)
by boiling the mixture
baking soda, ammonia, and saltwater are three examples of basic solution's, although we are slowly making the sea acidic =[
In both fresh and saltwater tanks, ammonia needs to be absolutely zero at all times. This extremely toxic compound is produced constantly by fish and will build up very quickly unless steps are taken to remove it. There are bacteria that will remove ammonia and turn it into non-toxic compounds - this process is called the nitrogen cycle. In freshwater tanks these bacteria live mainly in the filter. In saltwater tanks, they are more likely to be found in live rock or live sand, which are the most natural ways to keep a saltwater tank clean.
By heating ammonia and hydrochloric acid are released.
Yes.
Yes, by evapouration to dryness, to get the salt. Then condensational process to get the fresh water.
There is a easy way. Just bubble it in water.
Yes. Saltwater can be made from a separate salt and water solvent.
silver chloride is soluble in ammonia, lead chloride is only slightly soluble in ammonia