A normal vinegar didn't contain sodium chloride.
all depends on how much water you put in and how much sodium chloride you used
yes
It really depends how much of it there is
The element Sodium (Na) is not poisonous, but reacts violently with moisture. Sodium Chloride (Salt) is not poisonous either, but too much makes you fat :)
As PURE sodium, practically none. But a good part of all sodium in the world is in the oceans- in the form of sodium chloride- salt. The total amount would be in the billions of tons. Seawater is about 3.5% salt.
Not much really happens. The salt (sodium chloride) dissociates into sodium ions and chloride ions in solution. The vinegar (acetic acid) dissociates into hydrogen ions (protons) and acetate ions in solution. The solid salt will most often dissolve in the vinegar. But, that's about it. Now, if you have something like a metal in the salt and vinegar solution, the chloride ions can induce nucleophilic attack on the metal ions, resulting in corrosion of the metal. If you boiled away the water in the solution, you would be left with some proportion of sodium chloride (salt), anhydrous acetic acid, and sodium acetate.
A tablespoon of vinegar is generally made up of a tablespoon (15 mL) of an acetic acid solution. It shouldn't have any salt (sodium chloride) unless otherwise specified.
all depends on how much water you put in and how much sodium chloride you used
When a mixture of sodium chloride and water is heated to dryness, the residue is sodium chloride, because the boiling point of sodium chloride is much higher than the boiling point of water.
Normal saline solution has a sodium chloride concentration of 9 g/L.
This depends on the sodium chloride concentration; higher the concentration, higher the density.
Sodium chloride is a compound not an element; the molar mass of NaCl is 58,44 g.
1 atom in each molecule (60,33417 %)
The ionic bonding in sodium chloride is much stronger than the internal bonding in either element that forms sodium chloride; therefore, the melting point of the salt is much higher than that of either element that forms the salt.
The solubility of sodium chloride in water is 360,0 g/L at 20 0C.
Answer: Zero.
At 20 0C the solubility of sodium chloride in water is approx. 360 g/L.