Essentially what happens is that the water is boiled, converting it to steam. Salt residue is then left behind. The steam is then passed through a condenser, which cools it back down to liquid form.
The proper name for the process is desalination.
Filtering the solution of water and grounded rock salt and then heating the salt solution by putting it in a evaporating dish and then heating it by using a Bunsen burner, heat mat, tripod and a gauze. Heat the mixture for 10 minutes.
Rock salt is just big crystals of NaCl. It can be extracted in three ways.
They can send people underground to chip it off the walls of a salt mine.
They can drill holes in salt deposits and pump in water. As the salt breaks down, they pump in more water. After a year they pump the brine into shallow ponds and let the water evaporate.
Or they can pump seawater into ponds and let it evaporate.
Distilling is an effective way to extract salt from water. You can boil the salt water and collect the steam for fresh, salt free water. Once the water has all boiled away, you can collect the salt that is left on the bottom of whatever you boiled the salt water in.
You let the water evaporate, leaving behind the salt.
Through the process of extraction
You can boil water out of salt b/c water has a lower boiling point than salt...but I don't think the other way is possible.
Water would move OUT of the snail and onto the salt.
It can be simply separated by Boiling. Heat the solution until all the water evaporates and there will be a left over of salt. If you also want to save the water, you can use the process of Distillation or Recrystallization.
to get the water back you have to heat the solution and collect the water vapour in a slightly cold container and the gas will condense back into salt free water
No. You have it the wrong way. Salt is more soluble in hot water than in cold water.
The easiest way to extract salt from water is to boil it until all the water has evaporated, which leaves the salt behind. This is the process used in "Sea Salt" production.
The easiest way to extract salt from water is to boil it until all the water has evaporated, which leaves the salt behind. This is the process used in "Sea Salt" production.
---- yes, i do, if you evaporate the water you leve behind the salt. this is a simple yet effective way of the separation.
One way is to mix salt with water and apply an electrical charge. Problem with this is that it will also release hazardous gasses in the process.
it has way more particles in it salt water does not water with salt
One way to extract chlorine from its raw material is to mix salt with water and apply an electrical charge. Problem with this is that it will also release hazardous gasses in the process. Chlorine gas is extremely hazardous...read up on it before trying to create it.
Evaporation is one way to remove salt from water. You can also use vacuum distillation as a process of removing salt from water.
There is no effective way to check it without hooking up water and electricity.There is no effective way to check it without hooking up water and electricity.
Evaporation is the best way as long as u have a way to trap the now clean water. Like boiling salt water and having a lid to trap the steam it makes. Or having something rigged to the pan to direct the water into a clean container.
It depends if you have more salt than water, or more water than salt, Salt will dissolve into the water either way. But if you have more salt it will turn into a wet clump of salt with dried pieces here and there.
a salt separator a salt separator
The key to melting ice with salt is to ensure maximum contact between ice and salt. Using a salt powder would actually be the most effective way to do this.