1. Brine is water solution of sodium chloride.
2. "Fused" NaCl is melted sodium chloride.
I believe molten sodium chloride is simply solid NaCl heated to a liquid form, while brine is concentrated NaCl solute dissolved in water solvent, therefore the difference is the absence of water from molten sodium chloride. You may want to cross reference..
Brine sokution
it is a bond between sodium and chloride dissolved in some liquid
Salt (Sodium Chloride) and water.
2NaOH + Cl2 → NaCl + NaOCl + H2O Sodium Hydroxide + Chlorine → Sodium Chloride (salt) + Sodium Hypochlorite + Water
Any difference, both are sodium chloride.
Brine is a water solution of sodium chloride (NaCl); the positive ion (cation) is sodium, Na+.
The word brine simply means salt; therefore, brine solutions can be made up of any salts including sodium chloride, magnesium chloride, calcium chloride. Less prominent constituents of brine solutions such as seawater may contain small amounts of barium chloride, barium sulfate, calcium sulfate, and calcium carbonate.
Brine is essentially salty water, usually with sodium chloride. It's saturated, or very nearly saturated, meaning that its at the point where no, or little more salt could be dissolved into the solution.
100 % brine water doesn'y exist or if you want is only sodium chloride.
Table salt is sodium chloride- usually listed in foods as sodium. Salt in general is a neutral compound composed of ions. 'Neutral ionic compound' might work as another name.
Sodium chloride is used in our daily life as a salt and industially it is used for preparing brine for solvay process.