Chemistry, asked by Anitmahesh7988, 9 months ago

Dissloving salt in water physical change or chemical change

Answers

Answered by dharshuvs06
0

Answer:

Chemical change

Explanation:

When you dissolve salt in water the sodium chloride dissociates in Na+ ions and Cl- ions, which may be written as a chemical equation:

NaCl(s) → Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq)

Therefore, dissolving salt in water is an example of a chemical change. The reactant (sodium chloride or NaCl) is different from the products (sodium cation and chlorine anion). Thus, any ionic compound that is soluble in water would experience a chemical change. In contrast, dissolving a covalent compound like sugar does not result in a chemical reaction. When sugar is dissolved, the molecules disperse throughout the water, but they don't change their chemical identity.

I hope that this answer helps u :-)

Plz mark me as BRAINLIEST!!!

Answered by crazymax01
1

Answer:

Dissolving salt in water is a chemical change

Explanation:

It is a chemical change as the ions get dissociated but it retains its chemical indentity....

Hope it helps....

Similar questions