Yes. Sodium and chloride are the most abundant ions in sea salt.
Sodium chloride is a salt - NaCl.Water is an oxide -H2O.
This is a solution of sodium chloride in water.
An example of a hygroscopic salt would be calcium chloride, a salt that absorbs water from the atmosphere to form a saturated solution
After the evaporation of water crystallized sodium chloride is obtained.
There is more than one element/compound. If we were to have a solution of Sodium Chloride (salt) and H2O (water), there are two different compounds in that one solution. The Sodium Chloride is split into chloride ions and sodium ions and water molecules surround them in the solution.
Salt water is a water solution of sodium chloride.
No, sodium chloride is the solute and water is the solvent in salt water
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte: - in water solution - as molten salt
Sodium chloride is an inorganic salt, an ionic salt, colorless, very soluble in water.
Salt water is a water solution of sodium chloride.
Because sodium chloride is salt! Obviously normal water has lower salt levels than salt water.
Sodium chloride dissolved in water form an electrolyte: NaCl..............Na+ + Cl-
chloride Chlorine. Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) my bobes
Sodium chloride is a salt - NaCl.Water is an oxide -H2O.
Sodium chloride is extracted from salt mines or sea water and after this is purified to become table salt.
Table salt is sodium chloride, or NaCl. It might also be called halite (which is the name of sodium chloride crystals considered as a mineral), though that's more the geological name for salt).
Salt water contain dissolved sodium chloride.