Yes. It is made up of one atom of Sodium (Na) and one of Chlorine (Cl).
2 atoms. NaCl
This is a salt containing only atoms from only two elements: example: sodium fluoride - NaF.
NaCl is the formula unit of sodium chloride (halite, rock salt, table salt, plain salt, common salt, edible salt etc.). NaCl has 2 atoms in the formula unit.
None. Pure table salt is NaCl. It contains only sodium (Na) and clorine (Cl) atoms.
Table salt is composed of atoms from 2 elements: Sodium & Chlorine, so table salt is a compound.
0 atoms. I'm guessing you are suggesting table salt, which is sodium chloride. Sodium chloride only contains sodium and chlorine and no oxygen.
Helium Atoms
No. Table Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) which has two atoms Sodium and Chlorine.
Only two atoms: Ag and I.
NaCl is salt. 2 atoms make up NaCl, salt, and if salt was composed of more atoms it would end up, as an example, Na2Cl3, 2 sodium atoms and 3 chlorine atoms, or something.
There should be at least two atoms of two elements in a salt.
The chemical formula of table salt (sodium chloride) is NaCl; the ratio is 1.