Any problem, any reaction.
molten NaCl and An aqueous solution of NaCl will be conducting due to the presence of free ions in these.
Molten NaCl and aqueous solution of NaCl will conduct elecctricity due to the presence of free (movable) ions.
The solubility of sodium chloride is 360,9 g/L at 20 0C; after this concentration the solution is supersaturated.
ions
The aqueous and molten solutions are electrically conducting
4.09 m
it inozies, and turns into salt water and forms hydrated ions
In water solutions salt is dissociated: NaCl--------------Na+ + Cl-
A NaCl solution is a mixture. It has Na+ ions, Cl- ions and water.
Not exactly. Saline solution is sterilized and is a dilution of sodium chloride (NaCl) - meaning that the NaCl is dissolved in deionized water. The solution is 9 grams of sodium chloride (NaCl) dissolved in 1 liter of water.
No. Generally, (I'm not a chemistry prof) it would be considered an aqueous solution. For instance, if salt were dissolved in water, it would be an aqueous solution of NaCl (aq).
In an aqueous solution sodium chloride can in fact conduct electricity. This is because within an aqueous solution ions are free to move while as a solid NaCl will not conduct any electricity