I've heard of people using epson salt before, but personally I've never tried it.
I just recently cured a case of poison ivy last weekend with a combination of treating it with bleach and water and then calomine lotion. If you don't have any calomine lotion, I would try my best to buy some right away, but if you really can't epson salt sounds like it would work over time, maybe a little less effectively at first though (since it is a home remedy).
Yeah, sure, salt water will kill anything, including everything around it and anything planted there, won't grow either.
I had poison ivy all over my stomach and neck!! When i went to the beach it got cleared up, clorean also helps a lot
A solution has a solute dissolved in the solvent. Examples: Sugar dissolved in water, table salt dissolved in water, oil dissolved in petrol (gasoline)
"S" on the Periodic Table is the symbol for SulphurS stands for Sulfur in the Periodic Table. It is a pale yellow, odorless, brittle solid, which cannot be dissolved in water, but can be dissolved in disulphide. Sulphur is essential to all life.
The solute is what's being dissolved (e.g., Table Salt) (The solvent is what the solute is being dissolved in, e.g., Water)
they come together and dissolved
It is an Ionic compound just as water is.
Yes, it is a homogeneous solution.
To much sodium can harm your body.
Table salt does not absolutely have to be dissolved in any solvent to conduct electricity, because it will do so if melted. The solvent if present must be one in which the salt ionizes, with water being the most common example.
Arsenic Thallium is the other.
50
who ever wrote this will get killed
Table sugar (sucrose) is a chemical compound not a mixture.