the water evaporates and then it leaves the salt behind
If you evaporate 10 grams of salt in 50 ml of water, all of the salt will remain once the water has completely evaporated. Evaporation only removes the water, leaving behind the salt.
The water will eventually evaporate off and leave the salt, which you can reclaim.
Salt does not evaporate with water, so all the salt that was initially in the water remains behind once the water has evaporated. This is because salt has a much higher boiling point than water and remains in solid form when the water evaporates.
A drop of salt water could have once been a drop of fresh water if it evaporated and then condensed again, accumulating salt along the way. This process is known as the water cycle.
The process used to separate salt from water is called evaporation. By heating the saltwater mixture, the water evaporates, leaving behind the salt crystals. The salt can then be collected once all the water has evaporated.
Salt is not evaporated !
Water is evaporated, not the salt.
The evaporated water from salt water has a lower density.
Sooner or later vapors will become water by condensing into liquid again.
With salt or not, water is evaporated.
Water is evaporated from the salt water.
To obtain salt water is evaporated.
It will become pure water vapour as it will leave behind chemicals and salt minerals and the other stuff.
When a hydrate is heated, the water, h20 is evaporated, leaving only the anhydrous salt. If you add water to a anhydrous salt, it will transition back into a hydrate.
Water is evaporated, salt remain as a solid residue.
Salt is not evaporated.
Salt is not evaporated with water and remain as a residue.