yes table salt can be broken but it depends
Yes, table salt can be broken down by physical means such as crushing or grinding it into smaller pieces. However, the chemical composition of salt remains the same even when broken down physically.
they are made up of different substances and are broken down different
After the electrolysis of melted NaCl chlorine and sodium are obtained.
No.
yes table salt can be broken but it depends
No. Compounds and mixtures are made of elements and can be broken down, as in table salt which is Sodium Chloride and can be split into sodium and chlorine gas, which are elements that have different properties.
Yes, it can. Salt is Sodium Chloride, which is NaCl. Table salt does have a few other things like anti-caking agents, but Sodium Chloride by itself is fine.
Yes, Epsom salt typically dissolves faster in water than table salt due to its larger surface area and crystal structure. Epsom salt is composed of hydrated magnesium sulfate, which tends to break apart and dissolve more readily compared to the sodium chloride in table salt.
Elements are what make up the Periodic Table; they also cannot be broken down into smaller substances.
Yes, it can, by starch.
Salt water and table salt +water are the same thing- a solution. Aluminum, gold and iron are all elements (pure substances) and can not be broken down. Jello is a colloid. Muddy water is a suspension, plus salad dressing. Perhaps sugar could be called a pure substance. But it can be broken down into its' component parts. Tea also.
The periodic table itself cannot be broken down into simpler substances because it is a tabular arrangement of all the known chemical elements. Each element on the periodic table is a fundamental substance that cannot be further broken down into simpler substances by ordinary chemical processes.