PURE SODIUM will blow your face off. Na+H2O=explosion. Pure sodium is also very soft, and needs to be stabily kept in kerosene. A good substitute for NaCl(sodium chloride, also known as table salt) is NaK-Sodium potassium. The funniest thing about soduim and chlorine is one is a yellow gas that will choke you to death, while the other dropped in water will cause huge explosions. Also, DO NOT TRY TO MAKE YOUR OWN SALT. The reaction could burn you seriously, or an uncontrolled chlorine leak will kill you. The short answer is 'no' -- sodium is a component of salt. What we commonly think of as 'table salt' -- the stuff on french fries that makes them taste, well, salty -- is sodium chloride, or NaCl. When sodium molecules meet chlorine molecules, they form edible salt. The most common 'salt substitute' is potassium chloride, or KCl, which, you might notice, is just like table salt except that it's potassium and chlorine instead of sodium and chlorine.
The most common salt substitute is Potassium Chloride.
Yes. Products such as Lo-salt use more KCl in place of NaCl
Yes, for people who have a sodium restricted diet due to high blood pressure, it is possible to substitute potassium chloride.
This is a loose question. Since the most well known use for salt is in human diet, we could start an answer in this context. To replace dietary sodium chloride salt completely with potassium could well have fatal effects. Sodium chloride is essential for the function of the nervous system. However a high sodium (ion) intake can also be fatal. In the last few years, low sodium (ion) salts have been marketed. These might have as little 35% of the sodium of typical sodium chloride table salt, the substitute for the missing sodium is sometimes purely potassium chloride and sometimes potassium with some magnesium.
Yes it can
Sodium is a component of salt; table salt is 40 percent sodium and 60 percent chloride. Sodium Chloride is what is commonly known as salt. So replacing sodium makes the compound no longer salt. AlsoSalt is a salt substitute that isn't salt, but tastes like it.
It is not a substitute, it is only an aromatized sodium chloride.
Potassium chloride is a salt and tastes almost the same as sodium chloride, so it is frequently used as a salt substitute in low sodium diets.
The most common salt substitute is Potassium Chloride.
Of course, both are sodium chloride.
Salt - is a compound. A combination of sodium and chlorine atoms.
Yes, both are sodium chloride.
Potassium acetate may be used as a food additive but was not used as a NaCl substitute.
Yes. Products such as Lo-salt use more KCl in place of NaCl
Yes, both are sodium chloride.
No, table salt is sodium chloride. Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate. They are two different substances.
Yes, for people who have a sodium restricted diet due to high blood pressure, it is possible to substitute potassium chloride.