if the salt is solid then you can run a filtration on it. if not then you could try to evaporate off the liquid by using a heating mantle as long as their is a large enough difference in boiling points between the water and the salt mixture.
The method is the evaporation of the vinegar water solution.
salt water.
In mixtures of salt and water, typically two phases are observed: a solid phase of salt crystals and a liquid phase of water.
salt and water. let the water evaporate and the salt should be left behind.
No. Salt water is an example of a solution, in which salt is the solute and water is the solvent. Solutions are mixtures, not compounds.
Brass, an alloy of copper and zinc, is like salt water in that both are mixtures. Salt water is a mixture of water and salt molecules, while brass is a mixture of copper and zinc atoms. Both brass and salt water exhibit unique properties due to their mixture compositions.
Some homogeneous mixtures include salt water, air, and gasoline.
yes it is a solution, and all solutions are mixtures, but all mixtures are not solutions.
Homogeneous Mixtures
salt - ionic compoundwater - covalent polar compoundsalt water - solution
homogenous mixtures dissolve eg salt & water. hetrogenous mixtures do not dissolve eg chalk powder & water.
salt and water that's will do the trick