Yes, it is possible.
No, calcium carbonate is not soluble in sodium chloride. When calcium carbonate is mixed with sodium chloride in water, the calcium carbonate will remain as solid particles and not dissolve into the solution.
Pure sodium chloride doesn't contain calcium chloride.
Calcium carbonate has a solubility of 0.0006g per 100g of water at standard temperatures so the precipitate formed will be that. Sodium Chloride is very soluble, with 35.9g per 100g of water.
The precipitate formed when sodium carbonate and calcium chloride dihydrate are mixed is white in color. This white precipitate is calcium carbonate, which is insoluble in water.
Calcium carbonate and sodium chloride doesn't react.
When u mix calcium chloride&sodium carbonate u get calcium carbonate,which turns lime water milky wen calcium hydrogen trioxocarbonate and sodium chloride i.e cacl2 + Naco3--caco3 +2Nacl.
Sodium chloride doesn't contain calcium. Calcium chloride contain calcium.
Sodium chloride doesn't contain calcium. Calcium chloride contain calcium.
To remove sodium chloride from calcium stearate, you can dissolve the mixture in water. Sodium chloride is water-soluble, so it will dissolve in the water while calcium stearate remains insoluble. By filtering the solution, you can separate the sodium chloride from the calcium stearate.
Sodium chloride is NaCl, calcium chloride is CaCl2. Consequently all the physical and chemical properties are different.
Calcium chloride is more effective for melting ice than sodium chloride.
This is sodium chloride - NaCl.