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Adding sodium chloride soap is precipitated.
The reaction is not possible.
Adding hydrochloric acid.
You can separate gold from sodium gold chloride by adding zinc powder to the sodium gold chloride and heating the mixture. Then you will be left with just gold.
Rehydration of the organism: adding water and sodium to blood.
Adding sodium chloride to foods; the daily intake is limited to approx. 5 g NaCl.
Salinity (or 'saltiness') is due to the compound sodium chloride, written NaCl, and adding more of this will increase the salinity. However never add metallic sodium to water, it produces a violent and dangerous reaction. So when you say 'adding sodium to chloride' I'm not sure what you mean. The compound sodium chloride is just cooking salt and quite harmless and you can add as much of that as you like, but sodium as an element is a different matter.
No, adding solid sodium hydroxide to neutralize hydrochloric acid (HCl) would not cause sodium chloride to redissolve. The reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid forms water and sodium chloride, which remains in its dissolved form. The addition of solid sodium hydroxide would simply further neutralize the acid and increase the concentration of the resulting sodium chloride solution.
After my opinion -any.
chemical
Divide the amount of sodium chloride by the total amount (sodium chloride + water). Then multiply that by 100 to convert to percent.
Adding water sodium and ammonium chloride are easily dissolved; by filtration of the solution sand is separated, remaining on the filter.