no
When oil and salt mix, the salt will not dissolve in the oil because they are immiscible. Instead, the salt will sink to the bottom of the container, creating a separate layer from the oil. The oil will not change in appearance or consistency.
no
no it can not
Salt and sugar dissolve in water as they are hydrophilic substances, meaning they are attracted to water molecules. Oil, being hydrophobic, does not dissolve in water and will separate from it, forming distinct layers.
Substances that are polar or ionic, such as salt, sugar, and acids, will dissolve in distilled water. Nonpolar substances, such as oil, will not dissolve in water.
Salt is not soluble in baby oil because baby oil is a nonpolar substance, while salt is a polar substance. Polar substances dissolve best in other polar substances, and nonpolar substances dissolve best in other nonpolar substances. In this case, the polarity difference between salt and baby oil prevents them from mixing or dissolving into each other.
Table salt (sodium chloride) is not soluble in cooking oil because salt is hydrophilic (water-loving) while oil is hydrophobic (water-repelling). The polar nature of salt molecules does not allow them to dissolve in nonpolar cooking oil.
Water dissolve easily salt.
No, but salt does dissolve in water.
Oil, being a non-polar covalent compound is not soluble in water, which is a polar solvent. Salts (not limited to NaCl, but all ionic salts,) being ionic compounds that disassociate in solution to form charged ions, are highly soluble in water.
Salt is a solid; water can dissolve candies.