Sodium chloride, like most everything else, can exist in any of the three states. Considering standard pressure, it exists as a gas above 1465°C, which is very hot, but possible. It is a liquid between 801-1465°C. It is solid at all temperatures below 801°C. The melting point is so high because ionic bonds are the strongest type of intermolecular forces.
NaCl is common salt which would make it a solid, but can be dissolved in water which would make it aqueous, as well.
A link between sodium chloride and green house gases doesn't exist.
Sodium chloride is a solid at room temperature.
No it is not a gas. It is a solid
After 801 0C sodium chloride is a liquid.
Sodium chloride is not a gas !
Sodium chloride doesn't react with oxygen gas.
Sodium chloride; the others are all elements.
Sodium chloride is a solid at room temperature.
Sodium Chloride is not a gas solid. It is in crystalline form which when heated, becomes molten. It never evaporates to give Sodium Chloride gas i.e. NaCl.
it results in hydrogen gas and sodium chloride.
One is a solid and one is a gas! Sodium chloride is known as common salt and the oceans contain billions of tons of it. Chlorine is a green poisonous gas which is heavier than air.
it is a gas which is acidic in nature when it combines with sodium it forms sodium chloride which is acidic
sodium chloride and oxygen gas.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a salt; ammonia (NH3) is a gas.
No; by heating solid sodium chloride may be transformed in a liquid or a gas.
Sodium is deposited at the cathode and chloride gas is evolved at the anode when electricity is passed through molten sodium chloride.
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants; sodium chloride is the product.