Does adding salt help water boil faster?
I've always heard adding salt to water makes it boil faster. Is this true? If so, why? If not, why do people do it?
Best Answer
No. The amount of salt you would have to add to water to make an appreciable difference is enormous.
Salt is added to water for various reasons: to season whatever is being cooked in it; to maintain colour; to maintain structural integrity.
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One particularly stubborn myth is that adding salt will make the water take longer to come to a boil. Chemically speaking, it's true that salt raises the boiling point; however, the amount of salt used in cooking applications is so small that it won't make a difference with timing.Does adding salt to water actually make it boil faster?
According to an old wives' tale, adding salt to a pot of water on the stove will make it boil faster. The tale is true, but the difference is negligible, an expert told Live Science.How can you make water boil faster?
5 Proven Methods to Boil Water FasterMore answers regarding does adding salt help water boil faster?
Answer 2
Actually adding salt to water makes it boil slower; it increases the boiling point so it takes a little longer to get there. It actually doesn't matter what you dissolve in water (or anything else). Adding a dissolved substance elevates the boiling point and lowers the freezing point.
Answer 3
No. See: http://itotd.com/articles/521/water-freezing-and-boiling-myths/
Anecdotal however, I often observed that if you have water close to the boiling point adding salt can make it boil instantly. Not sure why.
Answer 4
Some good answers here already, however, there are a couple of small effects to consider:
1) The solubility of gases in water decreases as the temperature is raised. So as you heat water to boiling, the gases dissolved in it become super-saturated. Adding salt to a supersaturated mixture provides nucleation sites for the gas to come out of solution (ie form bubbles). Those bubbles can make the water look cloudy or white, which can be mistaken for the start of boiling.
2) Solid NaCl actually releases heat when it is dissolved in water. Not very much heat, but if the water is on the narrow edge of boiling already, that added heat of dissolution can be enough to get things boiling a half a giffy sooner.
Again, these are both minor effects; the first merely looks a bit like near-boiling, the second probably can't be detected without a good stopwatch.
Answer 5
I can see why it may be misinterpreted that adding salt makes it boil 'faster'. One thing that the salt WILL do is introduce a surface (on the salt crystal) that helps the dissolved air to release from the water (looks like tiny bubbles). It can lead people to think that this is starting to boil. When water is actually boiling it is because liquid water is turned to water vapor, thus causing bubbles.
Answer 6
You guys misunderstood. It doesn't make it Faster it makes it Hotter. This will help you understand. http://www.knowswhy.com/why-does-salt-make-water-boil-faster/
Answer 7
I don't claim that it's true, but here's one more explanation, this one in favor of salt making water boil faster: http://www.swri.org/10light/water.htm
Briefly, they say that salt has lower heat capacity than water, and so water+salt will heat up more quickly than water alone. This overshadows the tiny increase in boiling point that the salt will also cause.
On the other hand, that same site says that adding salt to water will increase its volume, where I think the opposite is true (not 100% sure on that one).
Aside: It's fun how such an easy-to-evaluate experiment has so many different opinions, even with regard to the outcome of the experiment, let alone the explanation (:
Here's someone's video of doing the experiment (the water did boil faster with salt): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qcrDuc-XjRQ
Of course, you can poke plenty of holes in their methodology. We need a large government-funded study!
Here is one more link relating to the specific heat of water, when substances are dissolved in it: physics.stackexchange.com There, they did an experiment on cooling water, and found that water+salt cools faster. I think it's reasonable to believe that it heats faster, too.
Answer 8
It would increase boiling speed by being a bubble nucleator. We are talking kinetics not thermodynamics. The slight boiling point elevation would make little difference.
Answer 9
Salt decreases the vapor pressure within the vessel of whatever you're trying to boil. Therefore more pressure is needed to overcome the atmospheric pressure and for your liquid to reach a boil.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Riley Welsh, Mariana Montrazi, Monstera, Pixabay