Both salt water and regular water will boil. However, salt water will have a higher boiling point than regular water due to the presence of salt in the solution.
No, boiling a saltwater solution will not separate the salt from the water. When you boil the solution, the water will evaporate, leaving the salt behind. To retrieve the salt, you would need to use a different method such as evaporation followed by crystalization.
When you boil a salt solution, neither O2 (oxygen) nor CO2 (carbon dioxide) is released. Boiling a salt solution will only result in the water evaporating and leaving behind the salt crystals.
Plain water will boil first because adding salt to water increases its boiling point. This means that salt water needs to be heated to a higher temperature than plain water in order to boil.
Boil a lot of sea water.
Salt water.
Both salt water and regular water will boil. However, salt water will have a higher boiling point than regular water due to the presence of salt in the solution.
Don't add salt. Salt raises the boiling point of water, making it take longer.
Boil the water (and condense it if you want to keep it) and the salt will be left behind
Yes, drinking water does boil at a lower temperature than salt water.
If you boil it, the water will evaporate. If you leave it boiling long enough, you should only have salt left.
You boil the salt water so the water evaporates, leaving salt.
Adding salt to water actually increases its boiling point, so it will take longer for saltwater to boil compared to plain water. It is not recommended to add salt solely to make the water boil faster.
salt helps to bring the water to the boil faster.
Boil away the water and the salt will be left.
just boil the water and the salt remains at the back
you boil the water,so the water evaporates and the salt is left behind