salt water
Salt water is NOT a compound. Salt water is a SOLUTION. The SOLUTE being sodium chloride (salt) and the SOLVENT being water. Sodium Chloride , when not dissolved in water is a compound , similarly water is a compound.
salt is an ionic compound and gets dissolve in polar solvent as water,oils are non polar organic liquids.
yes. in fact, when you mix salt with water, you get salt water. =]
compound solution because the salt is dissolved in the water :)
You get salt water.
compound solution because the salt is dissolved in the water :)
It is quite easy to mix salt water and fresh water, which produces a more dilute form of salt water.
salt water is not considered a compound as the salt and water are not present in a fixed ratio. Thus it is called a mixture.
If you mix something and it actually mix forming a new compound either solid or fluid, then the reaction is chemical. this can be as easy as burning a sheet of paper. The reaction is chemical and triggered by heat. The product you get is compositionwise different to the original product. If having a glass of water and a glass of salt and you then mix the sand with the salt, then this would be a physical reaction. The salt and water mix, but does not actually form a new compound, only a mixture of the two. Another physical reaction is melting of ice (The water is still water even though it is a solid as in ice.)
no
The compound is 'soluble' in water.
Salt doesn't react with chlorine.