If you're heating it strongly enough to boil, then because it's boiling.
If not, the bubbles are probably dissolved air coming out of solution. The solubility of gases in liquids goes down as the liquids are heated.
Heating the solution water is evaporated and crystalline dried sodium chloride remain.
Heating it would evaporate the water
Evaporate the water. The salt will crystalize out. Evaporation can be accelerated by heating the solution,
It reduces the bubble volume as the density increase and I think what that guy was trying to say was................ the solution would suck if you add salt to the solution because I tried it and it wouldn't even make soap bubble. I think it's because the salt could have sucked up the water molecules ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ LIES! i did this expirement in chemistry and it created bubbles. The bubbles seemed to be bigger then the bubbles with just soap and water
heating the compound. ex: water salt mixture on a heating pad
Heating is a physical process.
You can add more salt by heating the solution because a higher temperature increases the solubility.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt water is a solution of salt dissolved in water.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt water is formed when salt dissolves in water. Solution is when their is a homogeneous mixture of 2 or more substances usually liquids.
1. Put the mixture in water and stir. 2. Salt is dissolved, sand not. 3. Filter the mixture. 4. Salt pass as a water solution. 5. Evaporate the water by heating.