Yes, since according to the wikipedia article for this substance more of it dissolves in water than this at a lower temperature.
Because its molecules (sodium bound ionically to chlorine) can spread out within the water (H2O) molecules. The polar water molecules attract both the sodium (positive ions) and the chlorine (negative ions). You may be interested to know that you can dissolve 34 grams of salt in 100 cm3 of water at 10 degrees C.
100 g water dissolve 45,8 g potassium chloride at 50 o 0C.
the solubility of potassium nitrate in 70 degreesCelsius water is about 134 g KNO3 per 100 g water
sodium chloride is more volatile as its BP is high
100[1/(50 + 1)] = 2 %, to the justified number of significant digits.
Dissolve 100 mg sodium chloride in 1 L demineralized water.
The solubility of sodium chlorate in water at 6o oC is 137 g/100 g.The solubility of sodium chloride in water at 6o oC is 37,04 g/100 g.
Dissolve 30g of sodium chloride in 100 mL of water.
Dissolve 3 g NaCl in 100 mL water.
The solubilty of sodium chloride in water at 80 0C is 379,3 g/L.
Dissolve 0,9 g sodium chloride in 100 mL distilled water.
Dissolve 12 g dried sodium chloride (reagent grade) in 100 mL demineralized water.
0.9% means there is 0.9 grams NaCl per 100ml of solution. So 1000 ml of 0.9% sodium chloride contains 9.0 grams of NaCl.
A strong relation is between the solubility and the temperature for all substances. For sodium chloride, at the room temperature, the solubility in water is approx. 36 g NaCl/100 g water.
The solubility of potassium chloride in water at 80 oC is 51,3 g/100 g.The solubility of sodium chloride in water at 80 oC is 37,93 g/100 g.
Oversaturated, only around 35g of sodium chloride will dissolve at that 20C.
The solubility of sodium chloride in water, at 80 0C, is 37,93 g NaCl/100 g water.