Electrolysis of molten sodium chloride will yield chlorine gas and liquid sodium metal which will cool to solid sodium metal. Electrolysis is best though reaction of molten NaCl with potassium, rubidium or cesium would be an alternative (not producing chlorine but exchanging metals to form the other chlorides).
Actually any of these reactions are not a (physical) extraction as said in the question.
No sodium chloride is not a heterogeneous mixture.
NaCl (sodium chloride) is a compound, not a mixture.
Sodium chloride is a compound, not a mixture.
Yes, sodium chloride solution is a mixture of compounds. It is a mixture of water and sodium chloride (NaCl) dissolved in the water. The sodium chloride dissociates into its ions (sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-)) in the solution.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound, not a mixture.
One way to obtain sodium chloride from a mixture of sodium chloride and sulfur without using water is by sublimation. Heating the mixture to a temperature where sulfur sublimes but sodium chloride does not can separate the two components. The sublimed sulfur can be collected separately, leaving behind sodium chloride.
Only the water solution of sodium chloride is a mixture of NaCl and water.
No, sodium chloride is a compound.
Sodium chloride is a compound, not an element. The solution is a homogeneous mixture./
Pure sodium chloride is homogeneous compound. It is not a mixture.
Ferric sodium chloride (Na3ClFe) is a compound not a mixture.
Sodium chloride is a compound of sodium and chlorine formed by ionic bonding of sodium ions and chlorine ions.