It possible to de-salinate water.
This is a reversible process.
Yes, adding salt to water is a reversible change because the salt can be dissolved in the water to create a saltwater solution, which can then be separated back into salt and water through processes like evaporation or distillation.
Sugar and Salt
it's acutely reversible
Sodium chloride is dissociated in water, forming ions Na+ and Cl-. Dissolution is a physical process because the chemical composition of salt (NaCl) remain unchanged; also the process is reversible.
This is a reversible process.
It is reversible. You can allow the water to evaporate, leaving the salt behind.
Yes, adding salt to water is a reversible change because the salt can be dissolved in the water to create a saltwater solution, which can then be separated back into salt and water through processes like evaporation or distillation.
Reversible Reaction
Sugar and Salt
no because it is reversible. If you dissolve out the water you are left with NaCl. A change that is reversible is a physical change.
it's acutely reversible
Sodium chloride is dissociated in water, forming ions Na+ and Cl-. Dissolution is a physical process because the chemical composition of salt (NaCl) remain unchanged; also the process is reversible.
... no?If your real question is "can you separate salt from water after you've mixed the two" ... sure. One simple way is to evaporate the water, leaving the salt behind.
A dehydrated salt can be rehydrated.
When copper sulfate salt is mixed with water, it undergoes a physical change. The salt dissolves in the water, resulting in a homogeneous solution, but the chemical composition of the copper sulfate remains unchanged. This process is reversible, as the water can be evaporated to retrieve the original salt.
the salt dissolves in the water and changes the taste it is achemical reaction ...it is a reversible reaction...because you can get the two different elements in the solution(solvent i.e water and solute i.e salt) back by boiling and condensation..