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SALT |
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SALTAbbreviation for Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, a series of US-Soviet negotiations 1969-79. saltIn chemistry, any compound formed from an acid and a base through the replacement of all or part of the hydrogen in the acid by a metal or electropositive radical. Common salt is sodium chloride. A salt may be produced by a chemical reaction between an acid and a base, or by the displacement of hydrogen from an acid by a metal (see displacement reaction). As a solid, the ions normally adopt a regular arrangement to form crystals. Some salts form only stable crystals as hydrates (when combined with water). Most inorganic salts readily dissolve in water to give an electrolyte (a solution that conducts electricity).
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The idea is to store volatile or otherwise unstable molecules within, say, an alkali halide such as common salt, says Josef Michl, now at the University of Texas at Austin. In common salt, for instance, sodium and chloride ions sit at the corners of a cube, and these cubes stack neatly to fill out each salt crystal. The American Soda research facility had to prove that low-cost solution mining methods, similar to those used to recover sulfur and common salt, were practical for the recovery of nahcolite," reported Mike Huffman, American Soda Senior Systems Engineer. |
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