Yes, salt it brittle.
A fluoride salt is brittle.
salt will react with rubber in the presence of heat, rubber can get brittle.
Table salt, or sodium chloride, is not brittle because its molecular structure is formed by strong ionic bonds between sodium and chloride ions. These bonds make the salt crystals relatively soft and easily deformable under pressure rather than brittle.
No, you cant. Salt does not have the same effect and wont make your peanut brittle rise. The baking soda is a rising agent- it should not be substituted.
You think probable to carbon dioxide.
Yes, ionic crystals are generally brittle due to the arrangement of their ions in a lattice structure. When a force is applied, the layers of ions cannot easily slide past each other, leading to cleavage and breakage along planes of weakness within the crystal lattice.
As brittle as glass.
Direct contact of salt on human hair dehydrates the scalp and follicles leaving it dry. Hair can also become brittle, tangled and rough as it soaks up water that keeps the hair moisturized.
Compounds such as diamond (carbon), silicon dioxide (silica), and sodium chloride (table salt) are brittle and have high melting points due to their strong covalent or ionic bonding, which makes it difficult for the layers of atoms to slide over each other.
Peanut Brittle
peanut brittle
sodium is brittle no its not you lier. how dear you lie ABOUT SCIENCE FOOOOOOOOLLLLLL.