NaCl pure is also colorless at room temperature.
Nothing it is colourless solution.
Heating NaCl at 801 0C the salt is melted.
Phenolphthalein turns pink in a base and turns colourless in a base
its react with bromine water or idone and turns the solution colourless. not clear colourless...more scientific..haha
When a solid turns into a liquid, the substance has melted.
Orange. It turns colourless in acids and pink in alkaline.
The ice is melted because the heat of solubilization of NaCl is released.
Bromine water and NaCl mixed together appears colourless. The only condition which there is a colour is when the bromine water is old (bromine water is basically rum), but under normal conditions, the mixture ought to be colourless.
Yes, melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte in water solutions or when is melted.
- some salts as NaCl can be melted - other salts as Na2CO3 are thermally decomposed, obtaining a metal oxide
Rising the temperature to 801 0C sodium chloride is melted.