Salt particles don't make a gas during distillation. Distillation is a process of separating components of a liquid mixture by selective evaporation and condensation. During distillation, the liquid mixture is heated to a temperature where the more volatile components vaporize, leaving the less volatile components behind. The vapors are then condensed back to a liquid, and the separated components can be collected. Salt particles are not volatile, so they do not vaporize during distillation. Instead, they remain in the liquid phase and are separated from the other components of the mixture.