Science, asked by 465qamber22, 9 months ago

we disslove salt in water by what way the same amount of water could be made to dissolve move salt before getting saturated​

Answers

Answered by Geniusbrat
6

Explanation:

The polarity of water molecules enables water to dissolve many ionically bonded substances.

Salt (sodium chloride) is made from positive sodium ions bonded to negative chloride ions.

Water can dissolve salt because the positive part of water molecules attracts the negative chloride ions and the negative part of water molecules attracts the positive sodium ions.

The amount of a substance that can dissolve in a liquid (at a particular temperature) is called the solubility of the substance.

The substance being dissolved is called the solute, and the substance doing the dissolving is called the solvent.

Summary

Students will make a 2-D model of a salt crystal and use water molecule cut-outs to show how water dissolves salt. After seeing an animation of water dissolving salt, students will compare how well water and alcohol dissolve salt. They will relate their observations to the structure of salt, water, and alcohol on the molecular level.

Objective

Students will be able to explain, on the molecular level, why water can dissolve salt. Students will be able to identify the variables in their experiment. Students will also be able to explain why a less polar liquid, such as alcohol, is not good at dissolving salt.

Answered by hemansh1507
15

it depends on the amount of water and on the amount of salt if saturated water is their you may boil it

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