Yes. When ground up into very fine particles (like smoke) and heated to a significant temperature (still a solid, though) it could turn into a vapor because all of the small particles would float around. Although, you might be thinking of salt turning into a gas (boiling), which it would do at 2575 °F (1413 °C), which is much higher than the temperature at which it could evaporate, considering that the atoms have to break their ionic bonds completely.
It does not evaporate
evaporate it
Evaporate off the water leaving the dry salt crystals behind.
Let the water evaporate completely. The solid salt will be left behind.
The best method to recover salt from a mixture of salt and water is through the process of evaporation. By heating the mixture, the water will evaporate, leaving behind the salt which can then be collected.
First heat the mixture; the iodine will sublime and turn to a vapor which can be collected. Then add water to the remaining salt/sand mixture; the salt will dissolve but the sand will not. Finally, evaporate the water to obtain the solid salt.
To separate a mixture of table salt and water, you can use evaporation. Simply heat the mixture to evaporate the water, leaving behind the salt crystals. Once all the water has evaporated, you will be left with the salt.
Use filtration to separate the sand from the water and salt. Then use evaporation to separate the salt from the water. Use distillation to evaporate the water, leaving the salt behind. Then use filtration to separate the remaining sand from the salt.
To separate sand and salt, you can use the process of filtration. First, add water to the mixture to dissolve the salt. Then, pour the mixture through a filter to separate the sand, which will be left behind, from the salt solution that passes through. Finally, evaporate the water from the salt solution to retrieve the salt.
Heat the mixture, which will make the water evaporate, leaving behind the salt.
Put the mixture in water and wait for all of the salt to dissolve. Then filter out the sand and wait for the water to evaporate in the sand/water solution to get the sand and salt separately.
To separate a mixture of salt and rice, you can use the method of dissolving the salt in water. When you add water to the mixture, the salt will dissolve while the rice will remain intact. Then, you can filter the mixture to separate the rice from the salty water. Finally, you can evaporate the water to obtain the salt.
you put the salt water in some sort of cantainer and then wait for the water to evaporate, and the salt will remain in the bottom of the container.