At room temperature it's a solid. At temperatures above 801 degrees C it's a liquid, and above 1413 degrees C it's a gas.
The state symbol of sodium chloride (NaCl) is a white crystalline solid.
It goes from the solid state to the liquid state.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte in water solution or in molten state.
A solid Sodium chloride is common table salt
The reduction potential of sodium is under the same potential of water.
Liquid sodium chloride would be salt in its molten state... in solution, salt is dissolved in another liquid, often water..
Sodium chloride is a solid at room temperature and is commonly known as table salt.
The state symbol used to show that sodium chloride is aqueous is (aq), which stands for aqueous. When sodium chloride is dissolved in water, it dissociates into its constituent ions, sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-), and is represented as NaCl(aq).
Melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte containing the cation Na+and the anion Cl-.
Still sodium chloride.... In a solid form still. Molten NaCl occurs at 801C and above
Solid.
Sodium chloride exists as Na+ and Cl-. So it is ionic in solid state and in solutions and is polar.