don't know, don't care.....
pure sodium melts at 97 degree celsius and boils at 882 degree celsius but no idea of evaporating temperature.......
It's commonly called water glass or liquid glass.
Sodium chloride is not a liquid at room temperature. In fact, it is the chemical name for common table salt, which is a solid.
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.
It depends on what temperature scale you are using. For Celsius (ºC), Sodium is has already melted and will be in liquid form. For Fahrenheit (ºF), Sodium has not yet melted and is in solid form.
no liquid electrolyte which does not have sodium molecules conduct sodium ions because when liquid electrolyte does not have sodium molecules . so there r no sodium molecules and hence there r no any sodium ions. so how can liquid electrolyte conduct sodium ions.
Liquid sodium chloride is a conductor but not the best.
The Clorox company's product Liquid-Plumr contains the following ingredients: water, sodium hypochlorite, sodium chloride, sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, and sodium silicate.
Sodium is a solid metal.
It goes from the solid state to the liquid state.
A liquid without electrolytes, such as sodium, chlorine.
Sodium hypochlorite, commonly known as bleach, is liquid at room temperature, as it is a solution.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a solid.
Sodium is a solid at room temperature and pressure.
One that doesn't -- or at least reacts very slowly -- is liquid paraffin (example: drugstore mineral oil).
Liquid sodium chloride would be salt in its molten state... in solution, salt is dissolved in another liquid, often water..
Sodium chloride can be melted to its liquid state at around 1200 K at room pressure.