One way is two react sodium metal with chlorine gas
2Na(s) + Cl2 ---> 2NaCl
However this would be a useless reaction as salt one of the most abundant compounds on Earth
Sodium hydroxide is prepared from sodium chloride by the electrolysis of the solution.
Sodium chloride can be prepared in laboratory but this process is not economically important. Sodium chloride is a natural mineral (halite).
Sodium chloride can be prepared by this reaction:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
At room temperature sodium chloride is a solid.
At room temperature sodium chloride is a solid.
Chlorine gas is commercially prepared by electrolysis of aquaeous sodium chloride.
Sodium hydroxide is prepared by the electrolysis of sodium chloride water solutions.
Divide the amount of sodium chloride by the total amount (sodium chloride + water). Then multiply that by 100 to convert to percent.
Dissolve 58,44 g of analytical grade dried sodium chloride in 1 L demineralized water at 20 0C.
100[1/(50 + 1)] = 2 %, to the justified number of significant digits.
sodium hydroxide is prepared industrally by the electrolysis of brime but the lab. Preparation is sodium chloride and trioxosulphate(vi)acid.
physical or chemical? physical property: sucrose is sweet while sodium chloride is salty, sucrose is often prepared as fine, crystalline powder while sodium chloride is often prepared with larger crystals. chemical property: sucrose is made up of molecules while sodium chloride is made up of ions. sucrose when dissolved in water cannot conduct electricity because it has covalent bonds. thus there are no mobile ions or electrons to conduct electricity. sodium chloride on the other hand has mobile ions when dissolved in water. thus it can conduct electricity.