1.water containing a large amount of salt. 2.seawater. [before 1000] salt•wa•ter (ˈsɔltˌwɔ tər, -ˌwɒt ər) adj. 1.of or pertaining to salt water. 2.inhabiting salt water:a saltwater fish. [1520–30] ...
Suggest a way to determine if colorless liquid in a beaker is water. How could an experimenter discover if there is salt dissolved in the water? A beaker contains a clear, colorless liquid. It has three chemical substances in it: two of them are liquids a...
Salt, also called sodium chloride, mineral substance of great importance to human and animal health, as well as to industry. The mineral form halite, or rock salt, is sometimes called common salt to distinguish it from a class of chemical compounds calle
: a crystalline compound NaCl that is the chloride of sodium, is abundant in nature, and is used especially to season or preserve food or in industry called also common salt, sodium chloride b : a substance (as Glauber's salt) resembling common salt c : any of numerous compounds th...
When an ink composition is prepared using the azo compound or a salt thereof, the ink composition can have superior storage stability. Also provided is an ink composition containing the water soluble azo compound or a salt thereof. In the formula (1), R 1 and R 2 each independently ...
What is an insoluble salt? What does a dissolved salt look like? What metals are used to make salt? What is a pure compound? What is the compound formula of sodium nitrate? What is an electrovalent compound? A salt which absorbs water is called What is the type of bond between ions ...
12.4.4 Salt Water Intrusion The DGB is geologically vulnerable to salt water intrusion, which is to a certain extent due to the aquifer being attached directly to sea water, posing groundwater overexploitation. Between 2010 and 2012 a project was carried out by the National Directorate for Contro...
Salt solubility is the amount of salt that dissolves in a specific amount of water at a specified temperature. A salt is a chemical compound formed from a reaction that includes both an acid and a base when the hydrogen from the acid is replaced (all or in part) by a metal or other ...
An inorganic salt hydrate (hydrated salt or hydrate) is an ionic compound in which a number of water molecules are attracted by the ions and therefore enclosed within its crystal lattice. The general formula of a hydrated salt is MxNy.nH2O. The water molecules inside the crystals of a ...