Sodium chloride, also known as common salt, table salt, or halite, is a chemical compound with the formula NaCl. Sodium chloride is the salt most responsible for the salinity of the ocean and of the extracellular fluid of many multicellular organisms. As the main ingredient in edible salt, it is commonly used as a condiment and food preservative.
Each ion is surrounded by six of the other kind. This same basic structure is found in many other minerals, and is known as the halite structure. This arrangement is known as cubic close packed (ccp).
It is held together with an ionic bond and electrostatic forces.
0.9% sodium chloride in water is called a physiological solution because it is isotonic with blood plasma. It is known medically as normal saline. Physiological solution is the mainstay of fluid replacement therapy that is widely used in medicine in prevention or treatment of dehydration, or as an intravenous therapy to prevent hypovolemic shock due to blood loss.
Humans are unusual among primates in secreting large amounts of salt by sweating.
Salt's preservative ability was a foundation of civilization. It eliminated dependency on the seasonal availability of food and allowed travel over long distances. By the Middle Ages, caravans consisting of as many as forty thousand camels traversed four hundred miles of the Sahara bearing salt, sometimes trading it for slaves.
During his protests in India, Gandhi performed the famous salt march to challenge the British imposed monopoly on salt.
In the native Japanese religion shinto, salt is seen as "pure" and can be used to purify (bless) locations and people, such as in Sumo Wrestling.
While most people are familiar with the many uses of salt in cooking, they might be unaware that salt is used in a plethora of applications, from manufacturing pulp and paper to setting dyes in textiles and fabric, to producing soaps and detergents. In most of Canada and the northern USA, large quantities of rock salt are used to help clear highways of ice during winter, although "Road Salt" loses its melting ability at temperatures below -15°C to -20°C (5°F to -4°F).
Salt is also the raw material used to produce chlorine which itself is required for the production of many modern materials including PVC and pesticides.
| Solubility of NaCl in various solvents (g NaCl / 100 g of solvent at 25°C) | |
|---|---|
| H2O | 36 |
| Liquid ammonia | 3.02 |
| Methanol | 1.4 |
| Formic acid | 5.2 |
| Sulfolane | 0.005 |
| Acetonitrile | 0.0003 |
| Acetone | 0.000042 |
| Formamide | 9.4 |
| Dimethylformamide | 0.04 |
| Reference: Burgess, J. Metal Ions in Solution (Ellis Horwood, New York, 1978) ISBN 0853120277 | |
Salt is commonly used as a flavor enhancer for food and has been identified as one of the basic tastes. Unfortunately, given its history, this has resulted in large sections of the developed world ingesting salt massively in excess of the required intake, particularly in colder climates where the required intake is much lower. This causes elevated levels of blood pressure in some, which in turn is associated with increased risks of heart attack and stroke. Consuming salt in excess can also dehydrate the human body.
Chlorides | Sodium compounds | Edible salt | Metal halides | Salts | Granular materials | Condiments | Preservatives | Antiseptics
Натриев хлорид | Clorur sòdic | Chlorid sodný | Halen | Natriumklorid | Natriumchlorid | Naatriumkloriid | Cloruro sódico | Chlorure de sodium | 염화 나트륨 | Kuhinjska sol | Cloruro di sodio | Natrii Chloridum | Nātrija hlorīds | Nátrium-klorid | Natriumchloride | 塩化ナトリウム | Sé (NaCl) | NaCl | Chlorek sodu | Cloreto de sódio | Хлорид натрия | Chlorid sodný | Кухињска со | Natriumklorid | โซเดียมคลอไรด์ | Clorua natri | 氯化钠
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