❓ Why is water often referred to as NaCl (salt water), even though it may contain sulphates and phosphates too?
✅ 1. NaCl is the dominant and most recognisable salt in water
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In natural water bodies like oceans, rivers, and even groundwater, many dissolved minerals and salts are present.
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Sodium chloride (NaCl) is the most abundant salt in most of these, especially in seawater, which contains about 85–90% NaCl out of all dissolved salts.
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That’s why, when we casually refer to salt water, we usually mean water rich in NaCl.
⚗️ 2. Other salts like sulphates and phosphates are present but in smaller amounts
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Sulfates (SO₄²⁻), phosphates (PO₄³⁻), magnesium, calcium, and nitrates are also present in water — but in much smaller concentrations.
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For example, seawater has:
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Na⁺ and Cl⁻ (sodium and chloride) – ~90%
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Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺, K⁺ – 10%
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Sulfates, carbonates, bromides – trace amounts
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Phosphates – very small amounts (usually in parts per million or less)
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3. NaCl is chemically simple and easy to represent
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NaCl (table salt) dissolves fully into Na⁺ and Cl⁻ ions, making it ideal for scientific study and reference.
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It's often used in labs and textbooks to explain conductivity, osmosis, and ionic solutions, even if real water has a more complex mix.
Summary:
Reason | Explanation |
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Most abundant | NaCl is the main salt in seawater and many brackish water sources |
Easy to represent | Chemically simple and commonly understood by everyone |
Others are minor | Sulphates and phosphates exist, but in much smaller amounts |
Conventional usage | "Salt water" often just means “NaCl-rich water” for general understanding |
2 comments:
Nice explanation .
Thanks ji
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