No, sodium chloride is the solute and water is the solvent in salt water
It will burst out the soda crystals and distilled water.
Dissolve the sodium chloride(which is actually salt) in water. Then, filter the calcium carbonate with the help of filter paper. Crystallize the solution of sodium chloride with water... Hope this helps! :)
the sodium chloride mixed with water will remove its from the sulfur in fact, the sodium chloride or salt will dissolve in the water, leaving the sulfur undissolved.
The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent. Water is the solvent because it is what dissolves the solid salt into the solution. The water molecules pull apart the crystal structure of salt and surround the salt ions.
sodium chloride (NaCl) or table salt can be man made but it is mined on a commerical scale across the globe. This is because sodium chloride is made through the natural process of evaporation of salt water and the salt is crystallised and is so mined.
Water would be the solvent in this case.
no. it is a salt.
Salt and the water is the solvent in which it is dissolved. P.S-There are many more dissolved substances, however salt is the main one.
The sodium chloride would be the solute, the water the solvent, the two together the solution.
Sodium chloride is a solute when is dissolved in water (the solvent).
This solution is called salted water; salt is the solute and water the solvent.
Solute is the substance dissolved in a solvent.For example, for a sodium chloride (cooking salt) solution the water is the solvent and the salt the solute.
Table salt or sodium chloride is indeed a solute. It will dissolve and disperse in water. In that context, water is a solvent.
Water is polar. NaCl is polar. Polar substances are soluble in polar solvents.
Water is a very powerful SOLVENT. It will dissolve SALT ( sodium chloride) , the SOLUTE. When the solute is dissolved in the solvent it is called a SOLUTION. Sea water is a solution of salts and water. The principal salt is sodium chloride, however, there are plenty of other salts dissolved in sea-water, viz. sodium bromide, potassium chloride, potassium iodide, calcium carbonate. Also carbon dioxide dissolves in sea-water. These are just a few of the solutes in the solution named sea-water.
no. water is the solvent as it is in excess. the rest are generally solute.
Salt water is NOT a compound. Salt water is a SOLUTION. The SOLUTE being sodium chloride (salt) and the SOLVENT being water. Sodium Chloride , when not dissolved in water is a compound , similarly water is a compound.