solvation
Yes it is. Chemical property
Firstly, pure salt is white and it becomes colourless when dissolved in water. Secondly, solid salt is a non-conductor of electricity, whereas the solution is an electrolyte and conducts well.
don't know look in your science book
When salt dissolves in water, the number of observable phases is two: the solution of salt and water. The salt crystals disappear as they dissolve in the water, resulting in a homogenous mixture.
The water becomes a bit opaque and translucent
salt when dissolved in water will become an acidic solution
No, salt does not disappear in water. When salt is added to water, it dissolves to form a salt solution. The salt particles are still present in the water, but they are not visible to the naked eye.
This is the phenomenon of diffusion.
Sodium chloride (table salt) is just sodium ions and chlorine ions joined together in a lattice. When it dissolves, all the ions come apart and attach on the H and OH groups in the water, so in a sense it does disappear.
The solid salt become a solute: ions Na+ and Cl- exist now in solution.
No, a salt is a compound. A salt maybe dissolved in water and made into a solution but as salt is not a solution per se.
When salt is dissolved in water, it is in a dissolved state where the salt particles break apart into ions. This creates a solution where the salt ions are surrounded by water molecules.