Sodium Chloride is not a gas solid.
It is in crystalline form which when heated, becomes molten.
It never evaporates to give Sodium Chloride gas i.e. NaCl.
Yes
aqueous magnesium chloride is when magnesium oxide dissolves in hydrochloric acid. Aqueous means dissolved in water. ananya
Sodium chloride is not a liquid at room temperature. In fact, it is the chemical name for common table salt, which is a solid.
SrCl2 and it is a solid (s) at room temperature
It is a solid that can be liquefied In order to retrieve it to the solid form you need to allow the liquid to evaporate. It will leave the solid form. It is salt when chlorine is added, creating sodium chloride.
Phases are denoted with (s) (l) or (g) and aqueous solutions are (aq) ex: H2O(g) - water vapor H2O(l) - liquid water NaCl(aq) - aqueous sodium chloride NaCl(s) - solid sodium chloride
Sodium chloride is solid under 801 0C and liquid between 801 0C and 1 413 0C. Sodium solid may be in water solutions.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a solid.
Sodium chloride is a white, crystalline, solid.
Your question is not so clear; but: - liquid water - (H2O)l - water vapour- (H2O)g - sodium chloride as a solid - (NaCl)s
Sodium chloride is easily soluble in water forming sodium chloride aqueous solutions.
At room temperature sodium chloride is a solid.
Evaporate the water.
Still sodium chloride.... In a solid form still. Molten NaCl occurs at 801C and above
Yes
It goes from the solid state to the liquid state.
solid