You can separate the salt from the water. You need a special machine to separate salt from the water. but its very hard to do.
I hope i answered your Question.
Using fractional recrystallization.
because
The easiest way is to evaporate the water.
well obviously, if: Hydrochloric acid + Magnesium -> Magnesium Chloride + Hydrogen I'd say you CAN separate the magnesium Chloride by using Electrolysis ( using direct current to separate a compound to decompose into elements), but the Hydrogen doesn't have to, because there is an element not a compound. If you are talking about how you can separate HCL and Mg by itself, then obviously you can't because it is already separated.
aqueous magnesium chloride is when magnesium oxide dissolves in hydrochloric acid. Aqueous means dissolved in water. ananya
Since magnesium chloride is highly soluble in water, and Silver Chloride has low solubility in water, try diluting with excess water, and filter out the AgCl.
it is possible because of the pressure.,the gravity that takes place on it.,it is also same in taking salts in seawater.,
Its the chlorine and bromine (or the halogens) that make the seawater salty. Basically, electrolysis is used to separate seawater from chlorine. This is used by passing an electric current through a solution of sodium chloride (salt) in water. The solution conducts electricity because sodium chloride is an ionic compound. So then there is a reaction and it gets separated.Its short but hope this helped.
The water will slowly evaporate on its own at room temperature, but boiling temperature will do it much faster!
First, the sea water is collected in large basins and heated to evaporate some of the water. This yields a concentrated solution of water and various salts which are mixed with calcium hydroxide (lime) to yield a magnesium hydroxide precipitate. The precipitate is then reacted with hydrochloric acid to yield magnesium chloride. This is then separated into molten magnesium metal and chlorine gas ions through the electrolysis process. The chlorine is reacted with hydrogen to yield hydrochloric acid to be recycled, while the molten magnesium is then cast into ingots.
How can we separate ammonium chloride from sugar
by evaporation