Table salt is obtained from rock salt (from mines) or from sea salt by refining up to 97 % NaCl or more. Common procedures include filtering of the solution and crystallization/recrystallization.
Road salt is mined as rock salt and is usually mixed with sand before spreading on icy roads.
Road salt is just that- salt. Sodium Chloride. Mined from large mineral deposits.
I think road salt it made of salt, gravel and sand. The salf lowers the melting point of the snow/ice, so therefore melting it, and the sand and gravel give a car grip.
A de-icing product made from sugar beet-based molasses from western Nebraska is being touted as a noncorrosive alternative to winter road salt
Yes.
no because it has different chemicals in it
The salt dissolves which causes it to evaporate then it melts down and it becomes in the ground, which is in the groundwater.
Road salt is generally sodium chloride; also used is calcium chloride and rarely magnesium chloride.
Salt , beet juice and water
salt + road = road salt... keep it up
Road salt is impure salt directly extracted from mines.
I think road salt it made of salt, gravel and sand. The salf lowers the melting point of the snow/ice, so therefore melting it, and the sand and gravel give a car grip.
A de-icing product made from sugar beet-based molasses from western Nebraska is being touted as a noncorrosive alternative to winter road salt
No. A natural resources do not include man-made things. A road is a man-made thing.
Road Salt works because salt has a higher freezing point.
Road salt is used for deicing.
Road salt causes corosion of vehicles
Road salt is used for deicing streets and walkways
Road Salt Two was created on 2011-09-26.