Sodium chloride is solid under 801 0C and liquid between 801 0C and 1 413 0C.
Sodium solid may be in water solutions.
Phases are denoted with (s) (l) or (g) and aqueous solutions are (aq) ex: H2O(g) - water vapor H2O(l) - liquid water NaCl(aq) - aqueous sodium chloride NaCl(s) - solid sodium chloride
NaHCO3 (solid)+ HCl (aqueous) -> NaCl (aqueous)+ H2O (liquid)+ CO2 (gas)
NaCl is non-conducting as a solid, as the ions are held in a fixed position and cannot move to conduct electricity. However, it becomes conducting when molten or dissolved in water, as the ions are free to move and carry an electric charge through the material. This allows for the flow of electricity in the liquid state or in an aqueous solution of NaCl.
a) In a solid state, NaCl is an insulator since the ions are held in fixed positions and cannot move to conduct electricity. b) When NaCl is melted into a liquid state, the ions are free to move and can carry an electric current, making molten NaCl an electrical conductor. c) In an aqueous solution of NaCl, the salt dissociates into ions, allowing them to move freely in the solution and carry an electric current, making it a good conductor of electricity.
Your question is not so clear; but: - liquid water - (H2O)l - water vapour- (H2O)g - sodium chloride as a solid - (NaCl)s
Solid NaCl is not an electrical conductor as the ions are held in a fixed lattice structure. Molten NaCl and aqueous solution NaCl are electrical conductors as the ions are free to move and carry charge, allowing for the conduction of electricity.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a solid.
You get a sodium sulfate deposit.
No, solid NaCl cannot conduct an electrical current because ions are not free to move and carry the charge when in the solid state. Only in the molten or aqueous form can NaCl conduct electricity because the ions are mobile.
Potassium sulfite is typically found in solid form as a white crystalline powder. It is not a gas or a liquid at room temperature. When dissolved in water, it forms an aqueous solution.
It is aqueous. it can also be a solid or a gas but most commonly it is aqueous
Calcium bromide is typically found in its solid form as a white crystalline substance. When dissolved in water, it forms an aqueous solution.