Salt will dissolve in oil very slightly but not truly. salt is an ionic compound (it has a positive/negative side) and oil is usually covalent (there is no charge). The rule for solubility of compounds is that like dissolves like, so ionic dissolves ionic and covalent dissolves covalent.
Peppermint candy is made of mostly sugar and oil. Sugar dissolves in water, especially hot.
It dissolves in water.
The correct answer is salt water.
since its non-polar and "like dissolves like" it will take a long time, the amount of time, not sure.
Yes salt sinks in oil and dissolves in water taking a portion of oil with the salt.
The salt will not dissolve in the oil because oil is nonpolar and salt is polar, and like dissolves like.
Baking soda dissolves faster than salt.
Salt will dissolve in oil very slightly but not truly. salt is an ionic compound (it has a positive/negative side) and oil is usually covalent (there is no charge). The rule for solubility of compounds is that like dissolves like, so ionic dissolves ionic and covalent dissolves covalent.
This depends on the solubility of the solute (e.g. table salt or milk sugar) and the kind of solvent (e.g. water or oil)
with salt sugar and oil
NACL- Sodium Chloride dissolved in water, (also known as saline, or brine,) is a solution. Another example would be an iron alloy.
Peppermint candy is made of mostly sugar and oil. Sugar dissolves in water, especially hot.
salt
salt
some of the salt sinks to the bottom and some stays at the top
because the oil's particles aren't attracted enough to break down the salt's particles - true like dissolves like if you know what that means than great