A simple solution of salt in water is not a suspension; instead it is a true solution. If the salt water comes from a polluted part of the ocean, it may well be a suspension, but not because of its salt content.
Sodium chloride form solutions with water.
No. A colloid is a suspension of solid particles in a liquid medium. Salt is not suspended in water, it dissolves.
A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension. A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension.
No. Seawater is a solution, because the salt dissolves into the water. Unless you are referring to the dirt or fish feces or various other things in the ocean... So the salt is not, the other particles are. A better example would be muddy water, to avoid confusion.
The main constituent of common table salt is a compound, with the formula NaCl and the name of sodium chloride. Actual table salt may be a mixture, with small amounts of other materials in it.
It is a suspension.
Removing salt from water is a process, not solution/suspension. Salt form with water solutions.
No. Salt water is a solution.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) in water is a true solution.
No. A colloid is a suspension of solid particles in a liquid medium. Salt is not suspended in water, it dissolves.
A stirred supersaturated solution can be considered as a suspension.
Suspension
It's considered a solution but it can be separated by evaportaion.
1. Put the mixture in water and stir. 2. Salt is water soluble, sand not. 3. Filter the suspension: sand remain on the filter and the salt in solution.
salt water is a solution, since it dose not scatter light, and appears as one layer.
A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension. A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension.
that question does not make sense... do you mean are the salts in a saline SOLUTION in suspension? No... they are in solution. If you tried to seperate the salt from the water you could not unless you bolied off the water/cooled it down
BothThis is because the salt and sugar would dissolve creating a solution, and the sand would create a suspension!