At room temperature sodium chloride is a solid.
Yes, ions of sodium (+) and chloride (-) in solution.
Sodium chloride in liquid phase and sodium chloride in water solution are electrolytes, containing ions Na+ and Cl-.
Yes, it is ionic.
Sodium hydroxide solution will be on the top.
Sodium chloride and hydrogen peroxide can be considered electrolytes in the liquid phase because they dissociate into ions when dissolved in water and enable the conduction of electricity. Carbon dioxide and distilled water do not dissociate into ions in the liquid phase, so they are not considered electrolytes.
sodium chloride, due to the presence of free moving ions.
Yes, melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte.
Adding water and mixing a two-phases liquid mixture is obtained; sodium chloride is in the water phase. The separation is possible by decantation.
Camphor and sodium chloride can be separated by sublimation. When camphor is heated, it sublimes, meaning it changes from a solid directly to a vapor without passing through a liquid phase, and can be collected separately from the remaining sodium chloride.
Heating sodium chloride causes it to undergo a phase change from a solid to a liquid, called melting. Above its melting point of 801°C, sodium chloride will further decompose or evaporate into gaseous sodium and chlorine atoms.
Ammonium chloride can undergo sublimation, meaning it can transition directly from a solid to a gas without passing through a liquid phase, while sodium chloride (table salt) cannot sublimate under normal conditions.
Sodium chloride has two atoms in the formula unit (NaCl): sodium and chlorine.