yes, it is.
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Sodium chloride is not a catalyst.
absolutely.
Thymol is a good catalyst in saponification. I personally used it during chem prac class :)
Salt water can be considered as a catalyst in the reaction of forming aluminium oxide.
This substance is called a catalyst.
THat is a good question. Currently carbohydrates can not serve as catalyst and would be a great discovery if they did. Currently proteins, DNA, and RNA only have catalystic properties. -Organic Chemist
Sodium chloride hasn't a catalyst.
Salt acts as a catalyst. Acid tends to be a reactant.
Bile, catalyst and salt
absolutely.
sorta but the catalyst plus bat is great and composite for a cheap price
its not "who is" its "what are"...read the book and you'll find out. it really is a good book.
Thymol is a good catalyst in saponification. I personally used it during chem prac class :)
An important example is platinum.
The substance is "Road Salt" or coarse sodium chloride.
Salt water can be considered as a catalyst in the reaction of forming aluminium oxide.
a Salt usually containing a dissolved catalyst metal paired with a gas caused by the reaction.
because it has the word cat in it