The melting point of sodium chloride is 801 0C.
Salt is not a liquid it is a solid with a chemical compound of NaCl, it dissolves in water, that's why we have salt water. If you heated it up to about the temperature of lava it would become liquid, scince it is a mineral.
No, NaCl (sodium chloride) does not decrease when heated to 90 degrees Celsius. Heating NaCl at this temperature will not cause it to decompose or decrease in quantity – it will remain the same compound, only in a different physical state (solid to liquid).
By heating the internal energy of a solid increase what leads to melting when the crystalline system is destroyed and the solid become a liquid.
NaCl is sodium chloride or table salt. In granular form salt will not pass through a paper filter. However it will if dissolved in a liquid because it has become part of the liquid and no longer has the properties of a solid.
The water will boil if its temperature is brought high enough. The significant difference between boiling water and boiling water with sodium chloride in it is that the NaCl water will boil sooner. Adding salt to water will lower its boiling point as well as its freezing point. This is also why the road is salted in sub zero weather: to hinder the road from becoming icy.
Electrolysis of molten Sodium chloride(liquid NaCl), can be used to produce Sodium metal and Chlorine
It depends on what kind of solute was mixed in a solution. for example of NaCl, it would disolved if heated.
these are melted salts in which ions move freely therefore these are good conducters and rae said electrolytes.
NaCl
If you heat NaCl to 801 degrees C, it will melt and if heated to 1413 degrees C, it will boil. You can definitely melt salt in a Bunsen burner flame in one class period, but heating it to boiling would take some time.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a solid.
When H2O is heated it becomes a liquid (water)and than a gas (steam).This happens as a substance is heated the particles start to vibrate and therefore reducing the force of attraction between each particle. As the substance reaches a temperature of 0 degrees Celsius the solid changes state to a liquid. As the substance is given more heat the particles vibrate more and as they reach a temperature of 100 degrease Celsius the force of attraction between each particle is lost and the liquid becomes a gas which diffuses in the surroundings. When NaCl is heated the substance splits up in two sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl). Sodium is realised as a liquid and chlorine as a green gas. This happens due to the variations in their specific heat capacity. This process is known as combustion. If the substance is heated over u Bunsen flame the flame becomes yellow due to the presence of sodium which has a tendency to turn flames yellow. When MgSO4 is heated the substance is first split in MgSO2 and O2 is realised. As heating is continued the substance becomes MgS.