In reality, yes, it is. Tap water contains dissolved minerals and gases. Certainly it is "clean" enough to drink, but there remain a number of dissolved elements and compounds that were not removed during processing. And there were a few things added, as well.
In tap water, you will most likely find iron. In distilled or deionized water, no.
It accelerates the germination of the seeds with a 10-50 percent sugar water to tap water concentration. Take 20 g of sugar and mix it into 200 ml of tap water, and add 50% OF THE SOLUTION to the seeds water suply, and the other 50% is tap water. If you do more than that it will kill the seeds.
if u water your plants with tap water it will die more fast than spring water (tap water is from a sink
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No, addition of table salt (NaCl) to water used for watering plants will normally kill the plant.
Solution
Clean tap water is a homogeneous solution.
introduction of soap solution introduction of soap solution
If the substance is nonpolar it will not dissolve in either distilled or tap water. It will not make a solution with water. You will have to use a nonpolar solvent.
yea it does, the solution or mixture turns cloudy.
350grams
Tap water and dilute baking soda solution
Salt in a water solution will LOWER the Freezing Point of the resultant solution. Therefore the Saltwater will have to be cooled to a lower temperature. All other things being equal, that should take longer than the plain tap water.
As long as its clean, clear tap water its a homogeneous mixture (since the various other things that are in the water exist only in solution).
Tap water is H2O (with some trace impurities). This makes it a covalent molecule.
Windex, bleach, tap water (which is NOT pure water, but has dissolved chemicals and minerals), vinegar, etc.
In tap water, you will most likely find iron. In distilled or deionized water, no.