The easiest way is to shake the bottles, NaCl wil move easily and NH4Cl wont move very easily when shaken.
After heating ammonium chloride is sublimated and collected on a cold surface.
Evaporation. Heat the sample until all the water is driven off !
Water solution of sodium chloride is not miscible with carbon tetrachloride; separation is possible after decantation.
Ammonium chloride is separated by heating when NH4Cl is decomposed and released.
Heat it, the latter will vaporise
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) and Ammonium Nitrate (NH4NO3) are both separate compounds. However, both of them are salts.
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.
How can we separate ammonium chloride from sugar
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3.
NaCl, table salt, and ammonium chloride will both dissolve in water. Sand is only sparingly soluble in water. If you want to further separate ammonium chloride from sodium chloride, you will need to dry the resulting solution. The sodium chloride will precipitate out first. The ammonium chloride will remain in the supernatant and can be poured off leaving the sodium chloride crystals behind.
sublimation
I suppose that the best method is a repeated crystallization/recrystallization process.
Examples are: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, ammonium chloride, ammonium phosphates, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, cooper sulfate, magnesium chloride.
No
Sublimation - on gentle heating ammonium chloride will sublime. Sodium Chloride does not and has a high melting point.
Gently heat - ammonium chloride will sublime on a cold solid surface
There is no such substance as Na4Cl NaCl is sodium chloride. NH4Cl is ammonium chloride