if a magnet gets dipped is salt it loses some magnetism this can be experimented if you put iron filings in a plastic cup filled with water, you will see the water loses its magnetic field and wont see much movement at all.
No, a magnet does not lose its power of attraction when it is dipped in water. The magnetic field of the magnet remains intact in water and it can still attract objects.
No, salt cannot be separated from something else with a magnet. Salt is not magnetic and does not respond to magnetic fields.
When a horseshoe magnet is dipped in iron filings, the iron filings become magnetized and align themselves along the magnetic field lines emitted by the magnet. The filings cling to the magnet, visually demonstrating the shape and strength of the magnetic field. This process highlights the magnetic properties of the iron filings, which temporarily become magnets themselves due to the influence of the horseshoe magnet.
A magnet is not effective at separating salt and water because salt is not attracted to magnets. The components in the mixture have different physical properties (magnetism for the magnet, solubility for the salt) that make it impossible to separate them using a magnet. You would need to use methods like evaporation or filtration to separate salt from water.
Common salt and aluminum fillings can be separated by using a magnet. As aluminum is non-magnetic, the fillings can be easily separated from the magnetic salt using a magnet. Simply run the magnet over the mixture, and the aluminum fillings will be attracted to the magnet, leaving behind the salt.
a normal magnet
No, a magnet would not be effective in separating salt from water as salt is not magnetic. Instead, the mixture could be separated through the process of evaporation, where the water would be evaporated, leaving the salt behind.
One way to separate iron nails and salt is by using a magnet. Since iron is magnetic, you can move a magnet over the mixture and the iron nails will be attracted to the magnet, allowing you to separate them from the salt. Another method is to dissolve the mixture in water, as salt dissolves readily, and then use filtration to separate the solid iron nails from the dissolved salt solution.
no, since there is no metalic element in salt, its not magnetic.
U can separate salt and iron filings from each other by using a bigger magnet . There are other ways too . You can also put both of the mixture in a cup of water and watch as the salt evaporate or disappear . But the iron filings will come to the top . Or spreading the mixture on a table and using a magnet to separate them .
it dosent make the magnet stick anymore
a magnet would pull out the iron, and leave the salt.