If you heat it to 801 degrees Celsius, it melts.
Heating solid NaCl causes it first to melt and then to boil.
Nothing happens unless it is at an extremely high temperature (like 1500ºC) at which point it becomes molten.
If you heat NaCl to 801 degrees C, it will melt and if heated to 1413 degrees C, it will boil. You can definitely melt salt in a Bunsen burner flame in one class period, but heating it to boiling would take some time.
No, NaCl is not affected by such temperatures.
Ammonia gas will be evolved. The chemical reaction is :NH4Cl + NaOH --> NH3 (g) + NaCl + H2O
Nothing happens. It is still NaCl and KOH.
It depends on what kind of solute was mixed in a solution. for example of NaCl, it would disolved if heated.
Any reaction between NaCl and H.
Nothing. NaCl creates a reverse reaction to H2O.
When matter is heated it will expand
The equation is: NaCl----------Na++ Cl-
The freezing point of the solution depends on the NaCl concentration.
The melting point of sodium chloride is 801 0C.
When solids are heated they turn into liquid