No, because there is no such thing as "tamato" juice.
However salt will dissolve in the water part of "tomato" juice.
A mixture of vinegar and salt can effectively clean copper pennies. The acid in vinegar helps to dissolve the tarnish on the pennies, while the salt acts as a mild abrasive to help scrub away dirt and grime. Dip the pennies in the vinegar and salt solution, then rinse with water and dry thoroughly.
Salt (Sodium Chloride, or NaCl) will dissolve at different rates in liquids due to pH (acidity), dissolved solids (DS or TDS), atmospheric pressure (air pressure), and temperature. Typically at room temperature (60 degrees F) and 14psi air pressure (approx at sea level), salt will dissolve in very pure and/or acidic compounds more quickly.If water has 1000 ppm (parts-per-million) of dissolved solids - which is common in very hard well water - salt will dissolve slower than water that has near zero ppm of DS - which is extremely pure water. Basically, the more "stuff" existing in water - whether it's soda flavoring mix (Coke, Pepsi, RC,...), or OJ concentrate, or whatever - the slower the salt will dissolve. At approx 300,000 ppm DS (ten times sea water's level of 30,000ppm DS) salt will no longer dissolve. It would have, at that point, reached it's "saturation level".However... by changing air pressure or temperature, these levels can be overcome by a small amount.The answer would tend to be faster in water, but there are other possible variables that could influence it (salt would dissolve faster in very dilute orange juice than in concentrated sea water).
Orange Juice (Citric Acid) Egg Shells ( Calcium Carbonate). Remember the general reaction eq'n Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon dioxide.
The amount of salt that can dissolve in 20mL of water depends on the solubility of the salt at that temperature. For common table salt (sodium chloride), approximately 36 grams can dissolve in 20mL of water at room temperature.
Salt will dissolve faster in liquids than sand. Salt is a solute that is able to break down and mix with the liquid, forming a homogeneous solution. Sand, on the other hand, is insoluble and will not dissolve in liquid.
Lemon juice or tamato juice, but scrub your body really good first.
My brother dissolves sugar in his orange juice to make it sweet. You can dissolve salt in water to make saltwater.
tamato juice and as well are soybeans and texure vegtables
yes it can
Water dissolve easily salt.
No, but salt does dissolve in water.
It isn't really a matter of what would dissolve first, as it is which dissolves faster. Both would dissolve at the same time, but the sugar would dissolve faster, and in higher quantities. Sugar has a solubility of 211.5 g/100 mL of water where salt only is ~37 g/ 100 mL. Sugar still dissolves faster even though apple juice has 10.8 g of sugar per 100 mL, since the solubility is as high as it is, sugar would dissolve first.
there are many answers, but this depends on the solvent in which you want the solute to dissolve. If for example you're using water as a solvent, wax doesn't dissolve and neither does wood. If you're using methanol (ethanol) then sugar and salt don't dissolve. Freshly pressed orange juice doesn't dissolve in water or any other freshly pressed juice.
Yes, salt is soluble.
Salt will dissolve in water
Salt is a solid; water can dissolve candies.
Yes, water can dissolve salt. When salt is mixed with water, the water molecules surround the salt ions and break them apart, allowing the salt to dissolve into the water.