To separate a mixture of sodium chloride and aluminum filings, you can use a magnet to separate the aluminum filings since they are magnetic, while the sodium chloride will remain unaffected. Alternatively, you can dissolve the mixture in water, then filter it to separate the insoluble aluminum filings from the soluble sodium chloride solution.
first, add water to the mixture, barium chloride is soluble in water. then filter through and funnel and filter funnel. then add sodium sulphate, using the stove they will expand and separate. ( sodium cloride, and sand
You can use the technique of evaporation to separate the mixture of sodium chloride and water. By gently heating the mixture, the water will evaporate, leaving behind the solid sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride in water is a mixture. Sodium chloride is a compound made of sodium and chloride ions, while water is a separate compound made of hydrogen and oxygen. When sodium chloride is dissolved in water, it forms a mixture where the two substances remain chemically unchanged.
Yes, it is normal.
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.
No sodium chloride is not a heterogeneous mixture.
NaCl (sodium chloride) is a compound, not a mixture.
- Put the mixture in water. - Sodium chloride is soluble, sulfur not. - Filter the liquid. - Sulfur remain on the filter.
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.
Sodium chloride is a compound, not a mixture.
Yes, sodium chloride solution is a mixture of compounds. It is a mixture of water and sodium chloride (NaCl) dissolved in the water. The sodium chloride dissociates into its ions (sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-)) in the solution.