Salt has several chemical properties. The chemical properties that it is most known for are that it will create orange colored flames when heated in a bunsen flame. Being ionic, it is water soluble and it can conduct electricity in solution or when molten.
They Melt at a high temperature and salt solutions are highly conductive, They are also solids except for some salts that melt at room temperature (These are called ionic liquids)
sodium chloride
NaCl (or) sodium Chlorine
An acid and base
water
It all depends on the substance and its physical properties. For example, salt water can be separated by boiling the water and letting the salt remain.
It is made of Sodium and Chlorine, And is called Sodium Chloride. It is a crystal structure, dissolves under water, and will not burn when heated.
I think road salt it made of salt, gravel and sand. The salf lowers the melting point of the snow/ice, so therefore melting it, and the sand and gravel give a car grip.
Use a magnet to remove the iron, a filter or screen to remove the sand, and a still to remove the salt.
I really do not know what the answer for this question is.
sand has the same properties of salt
it is hydrogen and electrons
it is salty
no, salt dissolves in water.
he properties of salts are different from the properties of elements that go into making them
No, sodium chloride has no acid-base properties.
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
rocks and salt no reason
Salt is a common condiment, while sodium burns on contact with water and chlorine gas is poisonous.
What is the physical properties for fine sea salt
the product's properties usually and may differ from the properties of the reactants. Example-salt-sodium, a soft explosive metal and chlorine, a toxic gas. make salt.
Salt is a chemical compound. It has chemical and physical properties.