Biology, asked by fhanbridge, 6 months ago

when salts are dissolved in water:

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

\huge\bf\underline{\underline{\pink{A}\orange{N}\blue{S}\red{W}\green{E}\purple{R}}}

Water molecules pull the sodium and chloride ions apart, breaking the ionic bond that held them together. After the salt compounds are pulled apart, the sodium and chloride atoms are surrounded by water molecules. Once this happens, the salt is dissolved, resulting in a homogeneous solution.

\large\sf{\underline{\pink{Hope \:  It \:  Helps  \: You!}}}

Answered by Shajitha07
3

Answer:

Water molecules pull the sodium and chloride ions apart, breaking the ionic bond that held them together. After the salt compounds are pulled apart, the sodium and chloride atoms are surrounded by water molecules, as this diagram shows. Once this happens, the salt is dissolved, resulting in a homogeneous solution.

Explanation:

Hope it's helpful. Please mark me as brainliest and follow me

Similar questions