No, Sodium Chloride cannot produce electricity, but it's often used to produce electricity.
Disolve Sodium Chloride in water, which acts as a solvent, and the Sodium separates from the chloride, producing Positive and Negative IONS, that in solution, are called an ELECTROLYTE.
These positive and negative ions can now flow to the poles of a battery, and complete a circuit, as an electrical circuit.
.
Sodium chloride in solution or melted is a good conductor of electricity; but sodium chloride doesn't produce electricity.
The body doesn't produce sodium chloride.
Sodium Chloride solution (dissolved in water) conducts electricity, and molten Sodium Chloride conducts electricty, but dry crystal Sodium Chloride does not conduct electricity.
Sodium is deposited at the cathode and chloride gas is evolved at the anode when electricity is passed through molten sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride when dissolved in water forms an electrolyte that conducts electricity.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrical conductor.
Sodium chloride is not electrically conductive.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrical conductor.
Pure sodium chloride crystals are transparent.
Sodium chloride