If you have a normal chlorine pool and you want to convet to a salt water pool all you have to do is get a conversion kit which involves fiting a salt water indoctrinator along the the line fitting the electronics and puting salt in the pool. you dont have to do anything to the water in the pool other then put the salt in it.It is not a difficult job and does not require you to change your filtration system. The whole jog can be done in about 2 housr if everything is easily accessible.
chlorine
Sodium and chlorine separately contain much more chemical energy than sodium chloride does. In order to separate them you must put that energy into the salt.
No, chlorine is an element, consisting only of chlorine atoms. Common table salt contains chlorine in the form of the chloride ion (Cl-)
Do you have a system installed at the equipment pad that will convert the salt to chlorine? If not, then NO!.
A Salt water pool is a chlorine pool. The difference is that in the case of a saltwater pool there is a chlorinater fited inline that converts the salt into chlorine automaticaly, Meaning that you don't have to purchace any chlorine to keep up chlorine levels.
Making table salt (NaCl) from sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) is a chemical change but if it is just in a shaker, then no it is not.
Dissolution, meaning dissolving into a liquid form. It is a chemical reaction that begins with water covering a corner of the salt. The corner chlorine starts to leave the crystal and water bonds form. As the chlorine leaves more water molecules are left behind. The chlorine becomes fully solvated then the salt does the same.
Dissolving salt in water is an example of a physical change. Although the ions of sodium and chlorine separate when the salt dissolves, no chemical reaction takes place.
Chlorine
Need to rephrase question.
It is the chlorine. it doesnt happen in salt water pools
A salt system makes chlorine, that's what its there for.
Ordinary salt is a compound formed from sodium and chlorine.
chlorine
Sodium and chlorine separately contain much more chemical energy than sodium chloride does. In order to separate them you must put that energy into the salt.
Dissolving salt in water is an example of a physical change. Although the ions of sodium and chlorine separate when the salt dissolves, no chemical reaction takes place.
Formation of NaCl from chlorine and sodium is a chemical process.