no it is not.
Table salt.
Table salt can be collected from the sea water by evaporation phenomenon.
When you stir table salt into a glass of water, you are forming a solution. The salt particles dissolve in the water, creating a homogeneous mixture where the salt is evenly distributed throughout the liquid.
Table salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl), and while NaCl is found in salt water, there are many other salts and minerals found in it also. While some people do use actual sea salt, or sometimes just things marketed as sea salt, the stuff we put on the table is generally mined. If you have ever been swimming at the beach, and got some sea water in your mouth, you would know it does not taste real nice.
Table salt lowers the freezing point of water, which means that adding salt to water can prevent it from freezing at 0 degrees Celsius. This is why salt is commonly used to de-ice roads and sidewalks in snowy conditions.
Table salt.
The table salt mixes with the water.
Table salt can be collected from the sea water by evaporation phenomenon.
Yes. Salt (at least common table salt) is water soluble.
To separate a mixture of table salt and water, you can use evaporation. Simply heat the mixture to evaporate the water, leaving behind the salt crystals. Once all the water has evaporated, you will be left with the salt.
Table salt or sodium chloride is indeed a solute. It will dissolve and disperse in water. In that context, water is a solvent.
No, salt is not explosive. It is a stable compound that does not have the ability to explode.
Yes. Rock salt, which is largely the same as table salt, will dissolve in water.
Sodium chloride is extracted from salt mines or sea water and after this is purified to become table salt.
Some examples of compounds are water, table salt and sucrose. The water is H2O, table salt is NaCl, and sucrose is C12H22O11.
If you're talking about regular old table salt, then your answer is salt water--specifically boiling salt water.
1.) This is where we get our table salt from. 2.) Nobody wants to drink salty water.