Because it is made of the (pure) vapor of (??... yes!!): WATER, so it does NOT contain anything nonvolatile to be left over.
[Just think it over (and over) and you'll find how logic this is, one would have imagined it by himself].
When a sodium chloride and distilled water solution is evaporated, the water evaporates, leaving behind solid sodium chloride crystals. The crystals are the original salt that was dissolved in the water.
When salt water is evaporated, the water portion of the solution evaporates leaving behind the salt. This process is known as evaporation and can be used to produce salt from seawater in a process called solar evaporation.
The solid left behind after distilling sea water is primarily salt, predominantly sodium chloride. Other dissolved salts and minerals, such as magnesium, calcium, and potassium ions, may also be present in smaller amounts along with trace elements.
Pure water refers to water that is free from contaminants and impurities, while distilled water is a type of pure water that has been boiled and then condensed back into a liquid to remove impurities and minerals. Both pure and distilled water are suitable for drinking, but distilled water may lack some essential minerals that pure water naturally contains.
No, it is not. Distilled water is water in which all microscopic organisms and non-water matter has been removed. Filtered water just removes the particles that one could see with the naked eye.
When a sodium chloride and distilled water solution is evaporated, the water evaporates, leaving behind solid sodium chloride crystals. The crystals are the original salt that was dissolved in the water.
Yes, distilled water is quickly evaporated.
Distilled water is evaporated faster.
Rivers get their water from the rain, and rain is fresh because it is in effect distilled. Evaporated water that re-condenses as rain has left impurities or salts behind, when it evaporated.
Distillation of water (resulting in distilled water) is the best way or purifying water. Since the contaminants in water (ions, metals, microbes) are generally larger than water molecules, when water is evaporated, the contaminants are left behind. The evaporated water can then be condensed as pure water.
Evaporated and then condensed.
ordinary water is just boiled to vapor and recollected to filter out impurities
Yes. Distilled (evaporated) water is eminently potable, and often the best choice for water treatment if the source is known to contain harmful contaminants.
Distilled water is evaporated and then condensed, so it has absolutely no contaminates. Unwanted compounds in medicine could be very dangerous.
Well, sort of. It is distilled in the way that it's evaporated and then condensed again. But usually it manages to pick up a bit of contaminants on its way through the atmosphere, so it isn't as clean as industrially distilled water.
Yes. The water can be evaporated, leaving behind the sugar.
Yes, you can use evaporation of water to get separated from sugar. This evaporated water could be distilled for reuse. However, if the water is cotaining salts or other impurities; that could not be evaporated; then they will remain with sugar.