Actually salt does make it melt faster. And of course it lowers the melting point, hence why it melts.
When you add salt to an ice cube the salt immediately begins to dissolve, the ionic bonds break to form bonds with the water. (water has strong negative and positive points on it). Because the interaction is stronger than the interaction to stay as a solid the ice releases energy as heat given off melting until it hits a cold enough temperature to freeze again.
Table salt makes ice melt faster. Salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing ice to melt by dissolving into the liquid water and disrupting the hydrogen bond between water molecules. Sugar, sand, and pepper do not have the same effect on ice melting as salt.
You need to determine what you think will melt the fastest, and that will be your hypothesis. If you think that pepper will melt it faster, you would say "My hypothesis is that the pepper will melt ice faster than the other variables (sand, salt, and sugar)."
You need to determine what you think will melt the fastest, and that will be your hypothesis. If you think that pepper will melt it faster, you would say "My hypothesis is that the pepper will melt ice faster than the other variables (sand, salt, and sugar)."
Salt melts ice faster than sugar or pepper. Salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing it to turn into liquid water at a lower temperature than normal. Pepper and sugar do not have the same effect on ice as salt does.
Salt makes ice melt faster than sugar, pepper, or sand. This is because salt lowers the freezing point of water, causing the ice to melt by creating a brine solution that is colder than the surrounding ice. Sugar and pepper will not melt ice as effectively as salt due to their chemical compositions. Sand does not impact the melting rate of ice because it does not lower the freezing point of water.
Sugar. Salt often slows down the process of melting, so sugar is what would melt it faster.
sugar
yes it does, so will salt and probably pepper
Salt
Sugar melts faster than salt because sugar has a lower melting point than salt. Sugar typically begins to melt at around 320°F (160°C), whereas salt does not fully melt until it reaches temperatures exceeding 1,472°F (800°C).
Salt
Because if not it will melt faster