Sodium chloride is not used in laboratory as a drying agent.
Because sodium is a mild anti inflammatory and also drying agent.
drying agent absorbs the water content while dehydrating agent lost the water content.
Play dough is simply made of wheat, mineral oil, salt, a drying agent such as borax, agents, perfume and colourants.
Yes.
It is not recommended; after drying salt remain on the skin.
Because it is hygroscopic and leave traces on a tougher rock.
It can be if it crystallises inside a porous rock the salt crystals can crack the rock.
yes, it is a drying agent
Because sodium is a mild anti inflammatory and also drying agent.
drying agent absorbs the water content while dehydrating agent lost the water content.
halite or rock salt occured in SEDIMENTRY ROCK OF evaporides minerals which results from drying up of enclosed lakes,payals & sea
No. It is a chemical salt that is used as a food additive, used in medicine, used for ice control on roads, and as a drying agent.
Play dough is simply made of wheat, mineral oil, salt, a drying agent such as borax, agents, perfume and colourants.
It causes the drying agent to come in contact with the water that may be obstructed by different layers in the solution.
drying agent
a drying agent works by removing water molecules that may be contaminating a chemical product. Magnesium Sulfate (MgSO4) is an ionic salt. The charged Mg2+ and SO42- ions have a high affinity for water molecules and therefore are able to remove them from the product thus "drying it" of water. In this sense "drying" means "removing water" rather than "making less wet"
dehydrating salt