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I have some spilled un-iodized table salt (NaCl). It is very humid where I live, and when it gets very humid for a few days, the salt absorbs so much water that it becomes a puddle of (probably) saturated salt water. When the humidity drops for a few days, the water evaporates and I have dry salt crystals again. This is repeatable.

My questions about this process are:

  1. What is this process called exactly? As far as I understand "deliquescence" is a property and not a process. Does the exchange of water between my pile of salt and the air have a specific terminology? Something that would go along with terms like evaporation, sublimation, condensation, etc.? Perhaps some mash-up of adsorption and dissolution?
  2. Is this process akin to a phase change in some way? For example, if I had a sealed box of air with a dish of salt and a beaker of water, and I could ramp the temperature slowly enough, would I see a plateau at a certain humidity as the salt hit a threshold and started absorbing water until saturated?

Some may be familliar with the Morton Salt logo and slogan "When it rains, it pours" meaning that other moisture-absorbing materials in the package will keep the sodium chloride as table salt from absorbing too much water and becoming stuck and un-pourable:

Source

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uhoh
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  • Well, hygroscopic comes to mind, and condensation. It is a phase transition. Initially, it may be considered a condensation reaction (a process on the surface of salt crystals, possibly with water migrating into the crystal). At some point, it is transtion from water in the gas phase to water in a saturated NaCl solution. In other words, this involves multiple stages as you move from hydrated crystals to solvated salt ions. – Buck Thorn May 04 '19 at 09:28
  • @NightWriter "hygroscopicity" is a property, not a process, and condensation takes place without any hygroscopic materials being present. Also I don't think NaCl has a hydrated form. update: wait, maybe it does! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_of_crystallization – uhoh May 04 '19 at 09:33
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    See also https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/a/112915/35806 – Poutnik May 04 '19 at 09:56
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    NaCl does not have a hydrated form. It simply adsorbs water at its surface, which starts dissolving. When this surface phase becomes thick enough, it coalesces into one continous, NaCl saturated liquid phase, with residual salt particles still in it. – Karl May 04 '19 at 10:16
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    also See also https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/a/63901/16035 – uhoh May 04 '19 at 11:12
  • Well, hygroscopic does capture the initial property of a salt attracting humidity, so it seems relevant: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hygroscopy#Deliquescence . As for the lack of hydrated forms, well, that's interesting in its own right don't you think? – Buck Thorn May 04 '19 at 16:30

1 Answers1

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What is this process called exactly? As far as I understand "deliquescence" is a property and not a process. Does the exchange of water between my pile of salt and the air have a specific terminology? Something that would go along with terms like evaporation, sublimation, condensation, etc.? Perhaps some mash-up of adsorption and dissolution?

The property of salts to become wet as I mentioned in another post Scientific Reason for Salt Solution Gaining Volume is deliquescence. The corresponding verb is to deliquesce. It is a pretty old word. From OED (not open access):

To melt or become liquid by absorbing moisture from the air, as certain salts.

1756 C. Lucas Ess. Waters i. 14 They attract the humidity of the air, and deliquesce, or run liquid.

1781 Philos. Trans. 1780 (Royal Soc.) 70 349 This pot-ash..deliquesces a little in moist air.

1876 D. Page Adv. Text-bk. Geol. (ed. 6) xvi. 299 Pure chloride of sodium is not liable to deliquesce.*

Regarding phase changes, there were many phases changes involved in that process. The water as gas became liquid. The solid NaCl phase become one phase with a liquid. Once it evaporated, you got the solid again.

AChem
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