Every year, we start getting more cautious as colder
months approach and snow starts falling. Snow and ice can make for some pretty
dangerous driving conditions, so cities and towns try to combat these slippery
roads with rock salt. You may use rock salt in your driveway to help keep it
clear to easily get in and out. The question is: how much do you know about
rock salt besides that it gets a lot of use in the winter?
Rock salt is the mineral form of common table salt, or
sodium chloride. It’s also commonly referred to as Halite in industrial
settings. It forms as isometric crystals in sizes much larger than we see in
sodium chloride. It has an assortment of trace minerals in it that impact how it
behaves chemically, similarly to table salt.
Halite can form in many different sizes and colors. It’s
most common form is a colorless or white hue, but the amount and types of
impurities in the rock salt can make it a number of different colors. Other common
colors include light blue, dark blue, purple, pink, red, orange, yellow, or
gray. These various colors are also a result of the way rock salt is formed:
the evaporation of seas..
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