blue
Methyl orange turns red in acidic solutions with a pH below 3.1, and yellow in neutral to basic solutions with a pH above 4.4. In salt water, the pH will depend on the specific composition of the salt water, so the color change of methyl orange will vary accordingly.
Copper (II) sulfate is a salt that is green in color.
Salt water taffy does not contain actual seawater or salt water as an ingredient. The name "salt water taffy" likely originated from its coastal origins and traditional recipe that includes salt. However, the amount of salt water in salt water taffy is negligible.
The solvent is water, the solute is salt; solvent and solute form a solution.
Solute, because it is the minor component in the solution and it is what dissolves in the solvent. For example: Salt Water - The salt is the solute that dissoles in the solvent, which is water.
It will turn purple
THE COLOUR of the litmus paper will not change as a salt solution is neutral
Salt water typically forms a neutral pH solution, so it will likely appear green in universal indicator.
Dolphins are usually a grey/ blue colour. Logic shows this is due to camouflage. However it is unknown why they are this colour.
The dihydrated salt is blue-green.
On heating, hydrated salts lose their water of crystallization and as a result, the crystals lose their shape and colour and change to a powdery substance.
Unpolluted seawater is a cloudy/clear colour, formed from the natural water found in it and salt, among other things
I was asking this to see if any one had any ideas other than the old "ädd salt" to rinse water - in a separate container of course until the item is colour fast. I have just tried it since there were no other suggestions here and it seems to have worked. I added a good handful of rock salt to a tub of cold water and placed two pairs of pants in there that have been running colour into the wash water. In the salty water the colour has not run.
Copper (II) sulfate is a salt that is green in color.
Methyl orange turns red in acidic solutions with a pH below 3.1, and yellow in neutral to basic solutions with a pH above 4.4. In salt water, the pH will depend on the specific composition of the salt water, so the color change of methyl orange will vary accordingly.
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
white