Cytoplasm
Salt water usually refers to a a solution of common salt, sodium chloride, NaCl.
Yes (NaCl). Except other ionic salts ( ie CaCl2) have different solubilities in solutions.
Sea water takes part in the mixture of salt
Salt can increase the movement of molecules in water through a process called osmosis. When salt is dissolved in water, it creates a concentration gradient that causes water molecules to move towards the area with higher salt concentration, increasing the overall movement of molecules in the solution.
Hot water typically consists of H2O molecules and salt. Cold water with salt is also made up of H2O molecules and dissolves the salt in its solution.
Salt is the solute.
In water solutions salt is dissociated: NaCl--------------Na+ + Cl-
Salt goes into solution in water. That makes a salt and water solution of salt water, unless there is too much salt to completely dissolve in the water. In that case, it will be a mixture of salt and salt water.Saltwater is technically both a solution and a mixture, since all solutions are mixtures, or physical rather than chemical combinations of substances. However, the more narrow use of the term "mixture" excludes both solutions and alloys.
No, salt molecules are too large to pass through the pores of Visking tubing, which is a semi-permeable membrane. Only smaller molecules like water can pass through the tubing via osmosis.
Salt has a higher effect on osmosis compared to sugar because salt molecules dissociate into ions in the solution, increasing the osmotic pressure more than sugar molecules which remain intact. This leads to a greater water movement across a semi-permeable membrane in the presence of salt.
It is made of water (H2O) molecules and salt (NaCl) molecules. So two different types of molecules.
Salt water usually refers to a a solution of common salt, sodium chloride, NaCl.
It is by dehydration that salt solutions eliminate weeds.Specifically, weeds have external and internal moisture requirements to meet in order to survive. Salt interferes with a weed's water cycle. In essence, the weed perishes of thirst since water molecules are at the very entry level of all a plant's life-sustaining activities.
The water molecules move around the salt ions In water, the salt separates into positive and negative ions.
A salt solution is what is commonly known as salt water.
The evaporation of water is slow when water is dissolved in salt. This is because of the salt molecules, the salt molecules is the reason for the slow evaporation.
Salt increases the osmotic pressure in a solution, which can slow down or even reverse the flow of water in osmosis. This happens because the salt ions compete with water molecules for transport through the semi-permeable membrane, leading to a decrease in osmotic flow.