What Happens When Salt Is Added to Water?
The Basics jQuery(document).ready(function(){ jQuery(‘#jsArticleStep1 span.image a:first’).attr(‘href’,’http://i.ehow.com/images/a04/uu/3e/happens-salt-added-water_-1.1-800X800.jpg’); }); When a salt is added to water, it dissolves into its component molecules until as many salt ions as the water can hold are floating around the hydrogen and oxygen molecules. When this happens, the solution is “saturated.” As more salt is dissolved, sodium and chlorine ions bump into each other and re-combine into crystals of salt. This event is called “precipitation” because the solid that is formed falls to the bottom of the water. Salts are “hydrophilic,” meaning they are attracted to water. This attraction facilitates a more familiar type of precipitation; raindrops form around minute salt crystals in clouds, giving rain its slightly salty taste. Electrolytes jQuery(document).ready(function(){ jQuery(‘#jsArticleStep1 span.image a:first’).attr(‘href’,’http://i.ehow.com/images/a04/uu/3e/happens-salt-