Yes, it is true - approx. 35 g/L.
Chloride is actually the most abundant ion in ocean water.
There are several salts in sea water, but the most abundant is ordinary table salt or Sodium Chloride (NaCl). Sodium Chloride, like other salts, dissolves in water into its ions, so this is really a question about which ions are present in the greatest concentration.
Sodium chloride, potassium chloride, magnesium chloride
Yes, halite, the mineral form of Sodium Chloride is the most abundant salt found in seawater.
In seawater, sodium chloride (table salt) is the most abundant salt present, accounting for approximately 85% of the total dissolved salts. Calcium salts are less abundant compared to sodium chloride in seawater.
The most abundant compound in seawater is sodium (salt). Symbol is Na and atomic number is 11.
When the two most abundant elements in seawater, sodium and chloride ions, combine, they form sodium chloride salt (NaCl), which is commonly known as table salt. This compound makes up the majority of the dissolved solids in seawater.
If you mean element, that would be Hydrogen. If you mean compound, that would be Chloride. If you mean in sea salts that make up seawater, that would be Sodium. However, Chloride and Sodium go hand in hand, so Chloride gains an electron and Sodium loses one; then the two bond to create salt.
You think probable to sodium chloride (NaCl).
Yes, it is true - approx. 35 g/L.
The most important salt in sea/ocean waters is sodium chloride; also exist calcium chloride, potassium chloride, magnesium chloride.
The most abundant dissolved salt in ocean water is sodium chloride. It is a colorless crystalline compound with the chemical formula of NaCl.