It is not necessary to be especially careful when heating sodium chloride.
Heating NaCl at 801 0C the salt is melted.
The color remain unchanged.
Ammonium chloride may be released by heating.
If you heat the solution too vigorously, you can cause some of the solution to splash out of the container. This can cause loss of NaCl, which will affect your yield. Also, super heated splashes are dangerous to the face and eyes.
no, it is more safe to use water bath :)
Sodium chloride at room temperature is a crystalline transparent substance.
Sulfur is not soluble in water, sodium chloride yes. Filter the solution containing S and NaCl; sulfur remain on the filter, NaCl solution passes the filter. Evaporate te water by heating to obtain crystallized NaCl.
There are some disadvantages to having underfloor heating insulation. One must be careful of the furniture which is on top of the insulation. Heavy items such as pianos should not be placed on top. Underfloor heating also takes longer to heat than regular heaters and they can be quite costly.
most of all being careful right?
The percentage of sodium in sodium chloride is 39,665 83 %. Mass of NaCl = Mass of sodium X 2,51
If you heat it to 801 degrees Celsius, it melts.
1.5g NaCl x (1 mole / 58.5 g NaCl) x (1000 ml / 0.42 mole) = 61.05 ml