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Salt dissolved in water has no appearance. Take a glass of water, sprinkle a little salt in it, stir. Salt disappears when dissolved.
One way is to check the temperature of the water so if its hot obviously its going to dissolve quicker than if it is cold water.Another way is the speed of the stirring. If you stir it fast then its going to dissolve faster if you stir it slowly.Lastly it could depend on how big the salt crystals are for instance if its rock salt your using its going to take longer than if it is table salt.
Every 100 grams (100 millilitres) of boiling water (even hard water) will dissolve a maximum of about 40 grams of salt, so anything in excess of that amount just will not dissolve. If your poured a teaspoon of salt grains into a pan of boiling water it would dissolve immediately - almost no time at all.
Sup chuck
Salt dissolve quicker in hot water because it practicaly melts the salt there fore making it quicker.
100ml
rock salt dose not melt salt
ya sulemaganige gottu
# Heat some water. While it's heating, dissolve as much salt in it as possible. Keep going until the water gets to the boiling stage. # When the boiling water cannot take any more salt (a saturated solution) take the mixture off the stove and let it cool. The salt will form crystals as the water evaporates. # Crush the salt crystals, and you've got rock salt.
# Heat some water. While it's heating, dissolve as much salt in it as possible. Keep going until the water gets to the boiling stage. # When the boiling water cannot take any more salt (a saturated solution) take the mixture off the stove and let it cool. The salt will form crystals as the water evaporates. # Crush the salt crystals, and you've got rock salt.
Cavemen do not dissolve.
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This mainly depends on the quantity, temperature and movement of the fluid by stirring and the amount and kind of other dissolved substances (eg. ionic strength)
Chemical sedimentary rocks form by precipitation of minerals from water. Precipitation is when dissolved materials come out of water. For example: Take a glass of water and pour some salt (halite) into it. The salt will dissolve into the water.
The solubilty decrease at low temperatures.
Salt dissolved in water has no appearance. Take a glass of water, sprinkle a little salt in it, stir. Salt disappears when dissolved.