Yes - it is a "Lewis salt" formed from a Lewis acid and a Lewis base.
Most chemists would not call it a salt which is a term they would reserve for the product of the neutralisation of an H+ acid. They would call this an adduct or a complex.
salt is not from salt water
People who make salt are called salt producers or salt miners. They are responsible for extracting salt from salt mines or evaporating salt water to produce salt for consumption and various other purposes.
Do the salt residue and salt have the same texture
Salt dissolved in water is known as a saline solution.
Plain salt refers to salt that is in its pure form, composed mainly of sodium chloride with no added ingredients or flavorings. It is commonly used as a seasoning or preservative in cooking and food preparation.
Salt water is a solution of salt, containing of course salt.
salt is not from salt water
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
acidic salt basic salt normal salt
Salt. Nothing else added. Salt is a crystal and rock salt is salt that is not made into a fine grained salt.
No, pink salt and Himalayan salt are not the same. Pink salt is a generic term for salt that is pink in color, while Himalayan salt specifically refers to salt that is mined from the Khewra Salt Mine in Pakistan.
the salt is the solute
NaCl is commonly known as table salt - Na=Sodium Cl=Chloride
Table salt is a salt - sodium chloride (NaCl).
Eastern Salt. Occidental salt would be Western Salt.
Salt used in cooking is derived from seawater (sea salt) or from layers of salt in mineral deposits (rock salt or mineral salt).
Yes, cooking salt = table salt = rock salt = salt = halite = sodium chloride = NaCl