Yes. Camphor will sublime whereas sodium chloride will not. Hence they can be separated by sublimation.
Camphor and sodium chloride can be separated by sublimation. When camphor is heated, it sublimes, meaning it changes from a solid directly to a vapor without passing through a liquid phase, and can be collected separately from the remaining sodium chloride.
In the sublimation process, both sodium chloride (table salt) and camphor can directly change from a solid to a gaseous state without passing through a liquid phase. This occurs when they are heated in a controlled environment with low pressure, causing them to vaporize and then condense back into solid form upon cooling. Sodium chloride sublimes at a high temperature, while camphor sublimes at a lower temperature.
Naphthalene can be separated from sodium chloride by sublimation. When the mixture is heated, naphthalene will sublimate, turning from a solid to a gas, and can be collected separately from the solid sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride and ammonium chloride can be separated either by sublimation or filtration or crystallization. Sublimation can be found on this site ------------ http://www.lenntech.com/Chemistry/sublimation.htm. I personally think that this method is the easiest.
Sublimation - on gentle heating ammonium chloride will sublime. Sodium Chloride does not and has a high melting point.
The mixture of camphor and sodium chloride can be separated by sublimation. Camphor can be sublimed by heating, leaving sodium chloride behind. The vaporized camphor can then be collected and allowed to solidify back into pure camphor.
Camphor and sodium chloride can be separated by sublimation. When camphor is heated, it sublimes, meaning it changes from a solid directly to a vapor without passing through a liquid phase, and can be collected separately from the remaining sodium chloride.
In the sublimation process, both sodium chloride (table salt) and camphor can directly change from a solid to a gaseous state without passing through a liquid phase. This occurs when they are heated in a controlled environment with low pressure, causing them to vaporize and then condense back into solid form upon cooling. Sodium chloride sublimes at a high temperature, while camphor sublimes at a lower temperature.
Sodium chloride is NaCl, an inorganic salt. Camphor is C10H16O, an organic compound, a terpenoid..
Naphthalene can be separated from sodium chloride by sublimation. When the mixture is heated, naphthalene will sublimate, turning from a solid to a gas, and can be collected separately from the solid sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride and ammonium chloride can be separated either by sublimation or filtration or crystallization. Sublimation can be found on this site ------------ http://www.lenntech.com/Chemistry/sublimation.htm. I personally think that this method is the easiest.
Sublimation - on gentle heating ammonium chloride will sublime. Sodium Chloride does not and has a high melting point.
Ammonium chloride can undergo sublimation, meaning it can change from a solid directly to a gas without passing through a liquid state. Sodium chloride does not exhibit sublimation behavior.
Sublimation is a physical change.
Sodium chloride is separated from water by evaporation.
The experiment will not work because sodium chloride does not sublime. Ammonium chloride appears to sublime upon heating. However, this process is actually decomposition into ammonia and hydrogen chloride gas. NH4Cl + heat → NH3 + HCl (Wikipedia)
Sodium chloride is not purified by sublimation.