It pretty much doesn't.
No, actually sodium chloride can be considered the "ash" of burning metallic sodium in a chlorine gas atmosphere. The ash of combustion will not undergo further combustion.
Sodium chloride is the product of reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
Bonding M.P Solubility Taste Combustion NaCl IONIC V. high Soluble in cold water Saltish Non combustible Sucrose COVALENT Low Slightly soluble in cold water Combustible
no salt is not a combustible substance but salt water is combustiblle
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants and they combine into soldium chloride.
Sodium chloride is a compound, not a mixture; after refining NaCl become very pure.
In water sodium chloride is dissociated and the solution become an electrolyte, electrically conductive. The solid NaCl is not an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is extracted from salt mines or sea water and after this is purified to become table salt.
Sodium chloride can be made by two methods:Direct combination of sodium and chlorine. It is quite dangerous process as Sodium is combustible and chlorine is toxic.Reaction of NaOH and HCl. It is a relatively safer process.
Sodium and Chlorine (Will become sodium chloride)
The sodium atom will lose an electron and become a positively charged sodium ion, while the chloride atom will gain that electron and become a negatively charged chloride ion. These ions will be attracted to each other due to their opposite charges, forming an ionic bond to create sodium chloride, or table salt.
In a solid sodium chloride ions are not free; in solution or melting sodium chloride become an electrolyte, with free ions.