This special compound is used in our life and is also called rich in white gold. and This Compound is much more than just a condiment. This is a white crystalline substance which gives seawater its characteristic taste and is used for seasoning or preserving food.
This compound is known as Salt.And food is not the only thing that needs a pinch of salt: It is also found in soap, glass and plastic containers.
Rich in white gold: Salar
de Uyuni in Bolivia is the Earth’s largest salt desert and is well known for
its distinctive salt mounds.
Careful – it’s easy to get confused. Have you ever had to spit
out your first sip of coffee in the morning because you accidentally added salt
instead of sugar? But aside from taste, what does salt have that sugar doesn’t,
even though the two look so similar?
Ibexes lick at rocks
containing minerals, including sodium which is also essential for animals to
survive.
Salt’s electrostatic forces are what make it a very special raw
material in all its forms and facets. When we talk about salt in an everyday
context, we mean sodium chloride, also known as table salt. But from a
chemistry perspective, it is just one of many salts, since “salt” covers all of
the ionic solid compounds. They often form stunning crystal shapes, but not
every crystal is a salt.
Each salt has a positive and a negative charge and thus the
desire to bond. This property is what makes salt so multi-talented. For
example, in the bathroom, where salt in the form of soap (in chemistry terms,
the sodium and potassium salts of fatty acids) is waiting to bind with the fats
on our skin and the particles of dirt they contain. It is also practical that
some plant pigments are just as eager as salt to make electrostatic bonds – the
red wine stain on the flokati rug becomes invisible when rubbed with salt
because the salt and the pigment are attracted to each other.
“On average, our bodies contain 150 – 300 grams of sodium
chloride. Without salt we would be unable to live.“
Not all salt is the Same
Salts can be white or colorful, like the purple-colored
potassium permanganate which is used in deodorants because of its disinfectant
properties. Salts can taste spicy, such as ammonium chloride, a component of salty
licorice. Or salts can also taste sweet, like lead acetate (also known as lead
sugar) which is poisonous but was nevertheless used as a sweetener until the
19th century. Some salts are even highly toxic, such as potassium cyanide,
which is used in gold extraction.
The best-known salt is sodium chloride. But around 95 percent of
global table salt production does not end up on our table – instead, it is used
as an industrial raw material for numerous products, ranging from aluminum to
pulp.
Salt has very special properties when it is moving, i.e., in
liquid form. “Ionic liquids are made up of electrically charged molecules,”
explains Professor Barbara Kirchner from the Mulliken Center for Theoretical
Chemistry at the University of Bonn, Germany. Surprising reactions are possible
in these kinds of liquids. “From the various combinations of molecule ions, you
can get an endless variety of new liquids,” the researcher explains. “Right
now, for example, research is being done into their energy storage properties
in the field of lithium-air batteries.” And in solar thermal energy, ionic
liquids play an important role as heat storage media.
Enjoy in moderation
No living creature is able to survive without the physiological
functions of salt. On average, our bodies contain 150 – 300 grams of sodium
chloride. Whatever salt we lose by flushing out or by sweating, we have to
replace through our food consumption – as a rule, up to 6 grams per day. This
is because sodium ions act as a sort of universal regulator in our bodies: They
are vital for nerve and muscle function and for regulating our hydration and
blood pressure. Without salt we simply would be unable to live. The astounding
thing is that only a factor of 20 separates the amount that is physiologically
necessary and a fatal dose. If a person consumes around one gram of salt per
kilogram of body weight in a day, depending on his or her physical condition
there is a 50 percent chance that the person will die. An adult weighing 60 kilograms
can therefore die by consuming around 60 grams of salt within 24 hours; for a
small child weighing 15 kilograms, a deadly dose could be just a large
tablespoon with 15 grams.
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