You can't burn table salt very easily, but when you do, it "cackles" and will often fly up. I tried it on cement and a little bit of salt flew up at me. Be VERY careful when doing this with more than one bit of salt.
When you put a 20 degree cold ice cube with salt it becomes colder because it turns to salt water. Now it is about -20 degrees on your skin. What you get is a form of frostbite that turns into a burn. I would say the burn will be there for about a week to ten days or maybe less.
no
It's possible if your lips are dry they have little tiny cracks in them, and the salt will irritate your lips, and cause them to burn.
Salt remain as a residue.
It will form.
It gives you a freezer burn
Usually it'll blister and then scar.
Salt doesn't burn.
It melts, warning don't put it on your body it will burn you senseless.
When you put a 20 degree cold ice cube with salt it becomes colder because it turns to salt water. Now it is about -20 degrees on your skin. What you get is a form of frostbite that turns into a burn. I would say the burn will be there for about a week to ten days or maybe less.
if you eat a lot of spicy foods, your mouth may burn and your stomach may be upset. Too much salt can be bad for your heart.
If you put salt on a frog or any other kind of water dwelling creature....... IT WILL SHRIVEL UP AND DIE! If you give a little time of course.......
They will shrivel up and die because a snails body is mostly made out of water and also because salt absorbs water.
Yes. To burn a compound you need a halogen with a higher energy than the one in the salt. So if you put sodium chloride in a fluorine rich environment and apply a flame it will burn.
No. It is a nonflammable salt.
the answer is 109 degrees
no