Usually organic compounds are inflammable due to presence of Carbon which is converted into CO2 to gain the stability,in salts ions are present which already have gained the stability and do not form the oxides.
not to my knowledge but when you add salt to sprite it erupts
its been accomplished by directing radio waves through the salt water. http://www.newscientist.com/blog/technology/2007/09/fire-from-seawater-claim-lights-up-web.html its just a blog story but i read it in discovery news i believe a year and a half ago
Yes, some gels are flammable. How flammable would depend on it's alcohol, or flammable substance content. Some gels are not flammable at all, and others a very flammable.
No. Chlorine gas (though deadly) is non-flammable. However, fumes from chlorine bleach are not chlorine gas. Chlorine gas is Cl2 and is deadly but does not exist in nature, it must be manufactured. Evaporating bleach (NaOCl) generally fumes off oxygen and leaves NaCl (salt). None of these elements are flammable.
Carbonates are generally not flammable.
Rock salt is not flammable.
Sea salt is not flammable.
Salt (sodium chloride) is not flammable.
Salt is not flammable.
Table salt is not flammable
Salt is not flammable.
No. Table salt (sodium chloride) does not support oxidation or combustion. However, like other sodium compounds, it produces a yellow glow when placed in an open flame, a result of the sodium ions absorbing then releasing energy.
not to my knowledge but when you add salt to sprite it erupts
Salt is not flammable. It can, however, change the color of a fire, depending upon the type of salt you use (with table salt you just get boring yellow fire).
Hexane is a highly flammable liquid, C6 H14. Potassium sulfate is an inorganic salt. You'll never get it to burn.
sodium chloride (salt)
sodium chloride (salt)