No.
Adding rice to a shaker of table salt to absorb ambient moisture is a trick that has been used for as long as I can remember. It doesn't absorb moisture from the salt so much as from the around the salt.
The chemical formula for water is H2O, for carbon dioxide it is CO2, and for table salt it is NaCl.
Because salt is hygroscopic - can easily absorb or adsorb water.
No it was not a challenge to absorb enough CO2.
The salt will absorb any moisture in the surrounding air. Salt is best kept in a warm area of your home.
Water "dissolves" salt. Water does not absorb salt.
NaCl (table salt, an ionic compound) CO2 (carbon dioxide, a covalently bonded compound)
water is H20 carbon dioxide is CO2 dry ice is carbon dioxide so is CO2 also table salt is sodium chloride - NaCl
An oak tree can absorb about 48 pounds of CO2 in a year.
Tropical rainforests and mangroves are the plants that absorb the most CO2 from the atmosphere.
Tropical rainforests, mangroves, and seagrasses are known to absorb the most CO2 from the atmosphere.
Plants primarily absorb carbon dioxide (CO2) during photosynthesis and release oxygen as a byproduct. They do not absorb oxygen in the same way that they absorb CO2. Oxygen is mainly taken in through plant tissues for respiration, where it is used to break down sugars and produce energy.