Salt doesn't burn.
Salt does not burn. It has a high melting point of 1474 degrees Fahrenheit (801 degrees Celsius) and will transform into liquid form before burning.
It is not possible to burn salt because salt is a compound made of sodium and chloride ions, which do not burn. When heated, salt will simply melt or decompose, but it will not catch fire.
Warm it up in the oven, then toss it in your eyes. keep your eyes shut! shut shut.
it burn at 420 degrees Fahrenheit
No, diamonds don't burn.
it burn at 420 degrees Fahrenheit
Yes. To burn a compound you need a halogen with a higher energy than the one in the salt. So if you put sodium chloride in a fluorine rich environment and apply a flame it will burn.
The wood in a match can burn at temperatures exceeding 1,000 degrees Celsius (1,832 degrees Fahrenheit).
It depends, salt increases the speed of the burn and the intensity. I would say approximately 2minutes (with salt)
No. It is a nonflammable salt.
definitively a 3rd degree burn.
When you put a 20 degree cold ice cube with salt it becomes colder because it turns to salt water. Now it is about -20 degrees on your skin. What you get is a form of frostbite that turns into a burn. I would say the burn will be there for about a week to ten days or maybe less.