salt in water is dash to dash state
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When the salt has dissolved, it exists as disassociated Na+ and Cl- ions, just as some of the water exists as H+ and OH- ions. In this condition, it has all the characteristics of the liquid of which it forms a part. What you have is a solution which is homogenous, except at the molecular scale, and therefore a liquid.
So if we are to pin it down to one of the 3 common states of matter, solid, liquid or gas, the solution is a liquid. In a chemical equation, the ions are given a separate identifier - “aq.” for aqueous ie “in solution”. For example:
NaCl (s) = Na+ (aq.) + Cl- (aq.)
This is a bit confusing - but the ions are part of a liquid.
ʜᴏᴘᴇ ɪᴛ ʜᴇʟᴘs ᴜ~
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solid to liquid state because when we put salt in water it is in solid state but after sometime it desolve in water
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