Table salt, or NaCl (Sodium Chloride) will dissolve in water.
Because NaCl and H2O are polar compounds.
In water sodium chloride is dissociated:
NaCl----------------Na+ + Cl-
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water - approx. 360 g/L at 20 0C.
Yes. sodium chloride is very soluble in water.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water.
At 20°C (room temp.) 35.9g NaCl (salt) will dissolve in 100g of H2O (water).
Seven seas
Both salt (NaCl) and water molecules have one atom that concentrates the negative ... The NaCl and H2O interact in such a way that the partial negative charge on O is ... This process works because the attraction between NaCl and H2O is ...
Nothing. NaCl creates a reverse reaction to H2O.
The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
NaCl+H2O COMPELATE THE EQUATION
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
NaCL + H2O
HCl is an acid which reacts with NaOH a base to produce H2O water and a salt - in this case NaCl HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
Na is sodium CL is cloride NaCL is salt and H2O is water
The best solvent of NaCl is water.
CH4 is not polar.It does not dissolve