The dissolution of salt in water is a physical change (not a chemical change) because even after the salt (NaCl) is all dissolved, it is still NaCl but in a ionized form, like Na^+ and Cl^-. So, there has been no chemical change at all, only a physical change in going from a solid to a solution.
Dissolution is a physical change.
Dissolution is a physical process.
Dissolution is a physical change.
Dissolution is a physical change because the chemical nature of salt remain unchanged..
The dissolution of salt in water is a physical change (not a chemical change) because even after the salt (NaCl) is all dissolved, it is still NaCl but in a ionized form, like Na^+ and Cl^-. So, there has been no chemical change at all, only a physical change in going from a solid to a solution.
Dissolution doesn't involve the chemical transformation of the salt.
No, salt will (physically) dissolve in water, without changing chemical properties
No, it is a physical change.
This is a physical change. You can separate the salt and water by the physical process of distillation or evaporation where the water is boiled away and the salt is left behind.
It is a physical process; on the other hand dissociation in water is a chemical process.
During dissolution salt is not transfotmed in another compound; also dissolution is reversible.
Dissolution is considered a physical change.