Add the mixture to water, Barium chloride is soluble and will dissolve while Silver chloride is insoluble and will remain in solid form.
The silver chloride could be dried in a drying oven overnight at a temperature of 80 - 100 oC. The melting point of AgCl is ~ 457 oC
Barium and Phosphorus
Add hydrochloric acid to silver nitrate and stir well to ensure it is all reacted. Silver chloride will precipitate out and is fairly insoluble. Filter the solution and collect the filtrate on the filter paper. Rinse a few times with water to wash off the excess acid. Dry the filtrate in the oven. The result is pure silver chloride. Note this is sensitive to UV light, so this is best done in a dark room under a red lamp.
Sodium chloride and ammonium chloride dissolve in water. Take your mixture stir it in warm water and filter. Wash the filtrate with warm water, then dry of the filtrate.
Wash the mixture with water and separate the solid from the liquid, for example, by filtration. The sodium chloride will dissolve in the wash water, while the copper is left behind.
none
The solubility of silver chloride in water is almost negligible. So it could be separated from water by filtration or evaporation.
Barium sulfate is insoluble in water; after filtration remain on the filter and sodium chloride pass as a solution.
Not in its usual solid state. But like other ionic compounds calcium chloride will conduct electricity if molten or dissolved in water.
Water is deleted by heating and evaporation.
The silver chloride could be dried in a drying oven overnight at a temperature of 80 - 100 oC. The melting point of AgCl is ~ 457 oC
No, not the lead
You could melt Sodium chloride and use electrolysis to separate the Sodium and the Chlorine, which is how Sodium is produced on an industrial scale.
By adding silver nitrate to the compound. If a White precipitate is formed, then it means chloride ion is present.
Zinc chloride is very soluble in water and silicon dioxide is not soluble. - Put the mixture of ZnCl2 and SiO2 in water - Wait for the dissolving of the ZnCl2 - Separate the two components by filtering
No. It has a melting point, which is relatively high, and it can be dissolved in water. Once disolved in water, to form a Sodium chloride solution, if some other substance, such as Silver nitrate could be added which would produce a Sodium nitrate solution and a precipitate of Silver chloride. If this were done carefully no Sodium chloride would remain so you could say that it had been "destroyed."
Stay away from colloids because you still have huge molecules. Silver Chloride might have the same effect as sodiumchloride, table salt. I haven't tasted it though, but it could be salty