Salt and Water Evaporation Rates
Most recent answer: 03/15/2015
- Kiana (age 16)
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
That's a very ineresting observation. I don't know what the reason for it is, but can give you a gues that you can test.
You're right that the dissoved salt lowers the vapor pressure of water at any temperature. That should make the saltier solutions evaporate slower. What could revere that effect?
Perhaps as the water evaporates, salty deposits are left on the sides of the beaker. Water could wick up into these salty regions, giving a bigger area from which to evaporate. Can you see any salty regions like that?
Does the effect change at all if you use different types of glasses for the solution? What happens if you put each of the glasses on a heated metal plate at the same time, to try to make sure that they are each at the same temperature? How well-stirred were the salt solutions?
We'll be happy to follow up to help figure this out.
Mike W.
p.s. It looks like others have seen something similar: .
(published on 03/15/2015)