pH alkanity hardness ammonia etc.........
G. J. Kayem has written: 'Physico-chemical aspects of water-based emulsion paints'
Nutrients and sespended soils
Sophie C. Allan has written: 'The microbiological performance and operational characteristics of an integrated Oxfam physico-chemical water treatment system'
No. PEX and PB is different chemical compounds and have different working parameters. As I know usage Polybutilene for water supply system is not allowed in US. Use PEX tubing for plumbing.
Cetin Soydemir has written: 'Water content v.s. electrical resistivity relationship in saturated cohesive soil media and the related physico-chemical phenomena'
No. They need very different water parameters.
Dry ice is CO2 and water is H2O; all the chemical properties are different.
The chemical formula for water is H2O. The chemical formula stays the same even if water is in a different state (solid, liquid or gas).
It is a chemical change (reaction) because the chemical composition of the products (O2 and H2) is different from the chemical composition of the water (H2O).
The chemical formula of water (H2O) remain unchanged.
Within a Chemistry book that contains a section on the results of laboratory experiments that determine and define these parameters. This section may also list densities of water at different saline concentrations.
It is not the salt water pool or the salt water that is turning your hair green. It is a poorly maintained pool with a chemical imbalance - pH and total alkalinity out of required parameters.