the answer is sodium ions and chlorine ions
Because crystaline solids' atoms are linked by ionic bonding that gives regular geometric structure.
An ionic salt is made up of positive metal ions and negative nonmetal ions lined up in a regular pattern.
It is ionic
It's called a crystal if it's a regular, repeated pattern. It's called an amorphous solid if it has no regular pattern (which is unusual for ionic solids).
In solid ionic substances, they form a regular crystal lattice.
Yes. Barium nitrate is a crystaline solid as the several ionic materials. This substance decomposes at 590ºC.
Because crystaline solids' atoms are linked by ionic bonding that gives regular geometric structure.
A crystal structure, or lattice maybe? Like diamond? or maybe an ionic crystaline structure as in Sodium Chloride...
An ionic salt is made up of positive metal ions and negative nonmetal ions lined up in a regular pattern.
A crystal is a solid. But it is a solid with a natural geometrically regular form that has plane faces that are arranged symmetrically.
crystal lattice
It is ionic
"an is an ionic"
yes because ionic has a o in it
It's called a crystal if it's a regular, repeated pattern. It's called an amorphous solid if it has no regular pattern (which is unusual for ionic solids).
A crystal structure, or lattice maybe? Like diamond? or maybe an ionic crystaline structure as in Sodium Chloride...
If there is no reaction occuring to change the molecular structure of the substance, you have to look at the ionic product of the substance. When the ionic product is more than the Ksp of the substance, there would be precipitation of the substance