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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.
In oil wells and in marsh gas
it will look like one of those lava lamps
These glands are called the sebaceous glands which produce oil to give the hair a chic shiny lustre.
it works like this your poor some water into a jar add some oil wait for it to set then you poor salt all over the top lair the wala its done dust like magic
The salt will not dissolve in the oil because oil is nonpolar and salt is polar, and like dissolves like.
Visually oil sheen tends to have a rainbow of colors and the sheen edges tend to be smooth and gracefully curved. Mineral sheen tends to be silver in color with jagged edges and fractures running through the sheen. As oil sheen ages and the oils degrade it becomes more and more difficult to differentiate between oil and mineral sheens because the oils tend to take on the appearance of mineral sheen.
A visible sheen can be detected at around 60 ppm oil.
Oil sheen
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.
you put the salt in the oil :)
no oil and salt is not related
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
In oil wells and in marsh gas
It's endangered by oil spills:
Bansky
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