It depends upon why you are actually soaking the foot. If you just want to refresh your feet after a long, hard day, then simply mix up a brew of herbs with hot water, straiin and soak the feet.
No, salt cannot be separated from something else with a magnet. Salt is not magnetic and does not respond to magnetic fields.
The molar mass of Epsom salt (MgSO4) is 120.37 g/mol, and the molar mass of one water molecule (H2O) is 18.015 g/mol. The molar mass of MgSO4.7H2O is therefore 246.48 g/mol. The mass of water in this compound is 7 * 18.015 g/mol = 126.105 g/mol. Therefore, the percentage by mass of water in Epsom salt MgSO4.7H2O is (126.105 g/mol / 246.48 g/mol) * 100% = 51.16%.
You step on your luck!!!!
There is no (zero) salt at all in pure water, that's why it is 'pure' (meaning 'nothing else')
Examples: sodium carbonate, lithium chloride, potassium hydroxide, ammonium bromide, etc.
sediment
Table salt contain also potassium iodide or iodate (as a source of iodine) and an anticaking agent.
Put it In water for a taste of the sea
Water.
A low salt diet means trying to cut salt out so try to buy the low sodium version of everything like low salt soups and use less marinating sauce to cut it out.
yes. almost all compounds form crystal lattices. for examples, proteins form crystals.
no. There is only crystals in salt
Besides brands, you might want to compare price, type, maintenance cost, after sale service, whether it uses salt or not, etc. when you buy water softeners.
Alternative sources of iodine besides salt include seafood, dairy products, eggs, seaweed, and some fruits and vegetables.
No, salt cannot be separated from something else with a magnet. Salt is not magnetic and does not respond to magnetic fields.
Salt. Nothing else added. Salt is a crystal and rock salt is salt that is not made into a fine grained salt.
0.25%