When salt enters water, the water will cause the sodium and chloride atoms from the salt to pull apart and make the salt crystals begin to disappear. However, when the process is reversed and the water is removed by heating, the sodium and chloride atoms will begin to rejoin with each other, forming a solid matter we all know as salt.
The mixture gets its slaty flavour from the dissolved salt and its wetness from the solvent, water.
The pure water is the solvent and the minerals, salts that dissolved in the water (to make salt water) are called the solute. I assumed you were talking about sea/salt water? If you are talking about common salt dissolved in water the the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
water and sand there is dissolved sugar or salt with sand
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
No, a salt is a compound. A salt maybe dissolved in water and made into a solution but as salt is not a solution per se.
When salt is dissolved in water, it is in a dissolved state where the salt particles break apart into ions. This creates a solution where the salt ions are surrounded by water molecules.
Brine.In your example, the salt is the solute while the water is the solvent.
When salt is dissolved a water sodium chloride solution is obtained.
The separated salt is a crystalline solid; the dissolved salt is dissociated in ions.
Salt water is not considered pure water because it contains dissolved salts and minerals. It is classified as a mixture, where the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent. In comparison, pure water contains only water molecules with no additional substances dissolved in it.
Salt
Salt is very soluble in water.