gets hot and explodes
Salt (sodium chloride) has a melting point of 841 degrees Celsius and 1545.8 degrees Fahrenheit. if you don't heat it to that point nothing much happens.
If you raise the temperature of table salt (sodium chloride) to 801 degrees Celsius, it will melt. Otherwise not a whole lot will happen at all, it is an ionic compound.
when we heat up the salt, it changes it,s color and becomes coal like material.
The salt would probably melt. If its more than 800C(1472 Degrees.)
The water will evapourate leaving th
e salt
The water is evaporated and sodium chloride remain as a crystallized residue.
The melting point of sodium chloride is at 801 oC.
it turns into liquid:0
How salt dissolve in heat
The freezing point of water decrease because the dissolution is a process which release heat.
The salt rubidium chloride is produced, along with considerable heat and light!
The rubidium reacts violently, producing hydrogen gas and a rubidium salt. If oxygen is present the heat from the reaction may ignite the hydrogen.
Salt.
it's becomes a salt water
when we heat the salt there chemical reaction is takes place
Nothing provided the salt is not heated to melting point.
Salt release slowly the heat of dissolution and the temperature is increased.
salt and water are produced, usually with a release of heat.
How salt dissolve in heat
The freezing point of water decrease because the dissolution is a process which release heat.
I assume you are asking why salt melts ice. It's very difficult to tell from your question... What happens, is that ice always has a thin layer of liquid water on it. When salt disolves in water it produces heat, melting the ice, providing more liquid water to disolve the salt into.
whta is information of IT?
Ice is melted over 0 0C and salt is melted over 801 0C.
It give out heat (exothermic) and you get yourselves solution of sodium sulfate salt and water.
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