rocks and salt no reason
Neither, Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is a salt (table salt) made by reacting the metal Sodium with the Gas Chlorine. The substance, Sodium Chloride, has both physical and chemical properties but is not a property itself.
yes, rock salt is a chemical sedimentary rock.
Rock salt is not a rock...its just a salt that can be extracted from salty water especially from sea water.
Rock salt is a chemical sedimentary rock.
It does not turn into a rock. The term "rock" in rock salt is to describe the look and texture of the salt. Once the rock salt is used, it deomposes into its elements K, Cl, Ca then gets wahed away by rain, melted ice, or snow
All substances have a quantity known as their "cryoscopic constant". This quantity determines the amount their freezing point is lowered by having things dissolved in them. Water's is fairly large, and rock salt is fairly soluble in water. These two properties combine to lower water's freezing point significantly when rock salt is added.So, the property rock salt has that lowers the freezing point is its solubility.
Salt is a chemical compound. It has chemical and physical properties.
Halite is a mineral that is named for salt and is commonly known as rock salt. One special thing about halite is that its properties allow it to be used for food preservation as well as a treatment for roads during the winter.
I know one useful property is that it can dissolve. another thing that may be considered a property is that, if you evaporate salt water, the salt stays behind.
It was never really "invented." Rock salt is halite, a mineral.
I really do not know what the answer for this question is.
an example of physical properties are candles
Neither, Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is a salt (table salt) made by reacting the metal Sodium with the Gas Chlorine. The substance, Sodium Chloride, has both physical and chemical properties but is not a property itself.
It's really try it and you will find out relative
yes, rock salt is a chemical sedimentary rock.
sand has the same properties of salt
No, Properties of compounds are totally diffident from that of their constituent elements. For example the property of common salt (sodium chloride) is no way related to either the properties of sodium metal and chlorine gas.