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Is Dissolving Salt in Water a Chemical Change or a Physical Change?

5 pointsby georgecmuover 2 years ago

2 comments

ggmover 2 years ago
The distinctions between the sciences are moot, and the lower down the organ -&gt; molecule -&gt; atom -&gt; subatomic stack you go, the less clear the distinctions are.<p>Really, I think we should have kept the entire school of science as Natural Philosophy and required some generalist study under the umbrella and a specialisation.<p>All chemical changes are in some sense, physical. The question is, has something happened between molecules, between atoms, or within atoms and between sub-atomic particles.<p>Ions are dissociated but balance in the fluid suspension demands the ratio of Na and CL to H and O remains roughly constant (roughly) -if you reduce the water, then the solution tends to come out of solution because it&#x27;s no longer isotonic. If you remove some CL and leave surplus NA, it begs questions to what happens next. If you remove surplus H and try to leave the O alone, likewise.<p>Things happen, to keep balance. Balance means respecting the laws of physics. James Doohan was right there.<p>Not a chemist, a biologist or a physicist, this is what my father (a numerical analyst) said to me 4 decades ago.
WantonQuantumover 2 years ago
I love questions like this because it forces you to examine your assumptions. My first reaction was &quot;Of course it&#x27;s a chemical change!&quot;. But after reading the article I&#x27;m putting it in the &quot;it&#x27;s not clear cut&quot; basket or maybe the &quot;it&#x27;s both&quot; basket.
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