You increase the spaces between the water molecules, thus abling more salt to be dissolved in the water
Yes, tap water is fresh, because it is drinkable and not salty. That is what is meant by fresh water.
Freshwater is not salty. Saltwater is salty.
I would`nt... It serves no purpose. If the water is off there is no pressure when you turn on the tap, hot or cold, so you would be heating water you can`t use.
not if your heating with gas and not if you have city water
Salt In water In Conclusion dud Man
i don't know if its fresh or salty but i think it's fresh
yes it is different because sea water is salty and the water that comes oot the tap has no tate :)
tap water is cleaned in a special place you can go on http://www.watercare.co.nz/watercare/search.cfm?searchvalue=water+taste&submit.x=0&submit.y=0 to find out about water care. sea water is salty because sea water is salty because As the water runs through and over the land, it dissolves anything soluble it comes into contact with and takes it to the sea. When the sea evaporates to make clouds, the salt nearly all the salt is getting left behind.
Tap water naturally has some salts in it (sodium chloride, fluoride, etc.) from the filtration process, so these molecules can be brought to the surface when the water is frozen for ice cubes.
All metals will corrode faster in salt water than in tap water. Corrosion involves the movement of ions and electrons. Having extra ions in the water (salty water has sodium and chlorine ions) speeds this up.
no it is impossible....by heating at a high temperature it seems to be possible
Distillation will remove salt, boiling will leave the salt behind, but you have to go through the trouble of condensing it. Also, tap water has added chlorine, fluoride, and other antimicrobial chemicals to kill any microbes left after filtering. You would have to have certain filter systems and chemicals to make ACTUAL tap water.