Iodine is not soluble in water but soluble in organic solvents; sodium chloride is soluble in water.
Method 1: dissolving of the mixture in water, filtering, washing of the filter, recovery of iodine from the filter
Method 2: dissolving of the mixture in chloroform, filtering, recovery of iodine from the solution by air evaporation at room temperature
First add water to mixture the ammonium chloride will dissolve in the water but the iodine does not. Filter out the iodine using filtration then use evaporation or distillation to obtain the ammonium chloride.
Iodine is well known to sublime (change from solid to gas without becoming liquid inbetween) when heated. However sodium chloride has a melting point much higher than that of iodine. Therefore, a mixture of iodine and sodium chloride can be separated by using a sublimation apparatus, with solid iodine collected by condensation on a cold surface.
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.
Produces Sodium chloride and Iodine
sulfur sodium chloride sand is a homogeneous mixture (solution)
Yes, iodine can be released from the mixture by heating.
First add water to mixture the ammonium chloride will dissolve in the water but the iodine does not. Filter out the iodine using filtration then use evaporation or distillation to obtain the ammonium chloride.
Iodine is well known to sublime (change from solid to gas without becoming liquid inbetween) when heated. However sodium chloride has a melting point much higher than that of iodine. Therefore, a mixture of iodine and sodium chloride can be separated by using a sublimation apparatus, with solid iodine collected by condensation on a cold surface.
Iodine is not contained in Sodium Chloride, so can not be removed from it. I am thinking you wish to separate a mixture of Iodine and Sodium Chloride. Heat the mixture to 114C and the iodine will melt. Iodine can be vaporized and distilled. Under certain conditions, Iodine can react with other chemicals to create unstable explosive compounds. So be careful out there.
No sodium chloride is not a heterogeneous mixture.
NaCl (sodium chloride) is a compound, not a mixture.
use sublimation set-up...
Sodium chloride is a compound, not a mixture.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound, not a mixture.
Only the water solution of sodium chloride is a mixture of NaCl and water.
No, sodium chloride is a compound.
By separating the mixture of iodine solid and sodium iodine.Yun!!