Yes. In very small amounts.Sodium chloride is salt, applied at about 1 part to 1,000 salt to soil it can have a slight fertilising effect, but used at 1lb to a gallon of water it is a weedkiller.
Sodium Chloride- table salt - lowers the water's boiling and freezing point.
Yes, the effect of temperature on the solubility of sodium chloride is not so important.
sodium chloride is a salt.
Copper chloride + Sodium hydroxide --> Copper hydroxide + sodium chloride
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants. Sodium chloride will be the product
The ion chloride has a corrosive effect.
The ion chloride has a corrosive effect.
Sodium chloride is dissociated in water in Na+ and Cl-; the chloride ion has a strong corrosive effect.
The solubilty of sodium chloride increase with the temperature but the effect is not so important.
it is not possible
Salt draws water away from the roots, it also effects the way the plant gets its nutrients. In water, salt breaks down into sodium and chloride. The sodium replaces the nutrients in the soil, and the chloride, effects the photosynthasis in the leaves. These causes could effect the plant's growth by stunting it, it could make the plant turn brown and wilt, and last but not least, the plant could possibly die.
Definitely not! Sodium chloride is dangerous to most land plants and has no fertilizing ability whatever, in addition to not being biological.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; in water NaCl is dissolved and dissociated in ions.Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; sodium chloride is dissolved and dissociated in water.
Yes; the most important are: phosphates, nitrates and potassium As chloride. Micronutrients are: calcium, sulfur, iron, magnesium, selenium, sodium etc.
Sodium chloride kills plants.
Yes, in high doses.
If you think to potassium chloride, the effect is similar.