Salt water: Difference between revisions

From NOWA-CL
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 31: Line 31:
==Localities==
==Localities==
* Refugio State Beach, CA ({{latlon|34.463166|-120.070136111}})
* Refugio State Beach, CA ({{latlon|34.463166|-120.070136111}})
* Carpinteria, CA, ({{latlon|34.392|-119.527}})
* Carpinteria, CA, ({{latlon|34.394|-119.527}})


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 16:25, 5 December 2019

Salt water is a Naturally Occurring, Widely Available material. It is by definition a legitimate source material for this project. It is a crude mixture of water and many different chemical salts. It is not potable, since the salt content is high enough to dehydrate the human body.

Uses

Natural occurrence

{{#evt: service=youtube |id=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUPgSTUxcxU |alignment=right |dimensions=320x200 }}

  • Occurs naturally throughout the oceans
  • Occurs naturally in salt (brine) lakes

Hazards

  • Not potable

Composition

There is more at sea salt, but 1 kg of salt water contains approximately

965.00g Water
 19.25g Chloride (Cl-)
 10.70g Sodium
  2.70g Sulfate (SO4-2)
  1.30g Magnesium
  0.42g Calcium
  0.39g Potassium
  0.0673g Bromide (Br-)
  0.24g Other

This means that there's approximately ½ mol of sodium chloride (29g) of salt in 1 liter of salt water, requiring 965g of water to be boiled (evaporated) away to obtain it.

Localities

See Also

References