Sodium chloride can be melted or boiled but not sublime.
No, Sodium Chloride is NaCl, which is salt.
Sublimation - on gentle heating ammonium chloride will sublime. Sodium Chloride does not and has a high melting point.
Sodium chloride doesn't sublime.
Yes. It will become sublime of a heat consisting of a large energy and very high temperature. It is not noticable by naked eyes as it becomes smaller & smaller at last it vapourises. Evaporation of salt can be noticed many times in nature when a rainfall ocurrs its droplets are salty in taste.
The experiment will not work because sodium chloride does not sublime. Ammonium chloride appears to sublime upon heating. However, this process is actually decomposition into ammonia and hydrogen chloride gas. NH4Cl + heat → NH3 + HCl (Wikipedia)
Yes, camphor and sodium chloride can be separated by sublimation. Camphor sublimes at a lower temperature than sodium chloride, allowing them to be separated based on the difference in their sublimation points. The camphor will sublime and can be collected separately from the non-sublimed sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride is melted by heating at 801 0C.
The color remain unchanged for pure sodium chloride.
No; by heating solid sodium chloride may be transformed in a liquid or a gas.
Sodium chloride is separated by dissolving in water.Wax is released by heating.
The thermal dissociation reaction of ammonium chloride is:NH4Cl-------------------------NH3 + HClAmmonium chloride doesn't react with sodium chloride.
It is not necessary to be especially careful when heating sodium chloride.