You know when sodium is chemically reacting when you see bubbles or any weird thing going on....something thats happening that wasn't happening till now. (:
Sodium chloride is chemically homogeneous.
You can turn sodium hydroxide into sodium salicylate by reacting it with salicylic acid.
Mixture of sodium carbonate and magnesium
yes it is
To prevent sodium from reacting with oxygen, you can store it in an inert environment such as under oil or in a dry environment with minimal oxygen exposure. This helps to keep the sodium from coming into contact with oxygen and reacting to form sodium oxide.
Oxygen (which react with sodium) is not dissolved in kerosene.
Sodium becomes a positively charged ion (Na+) and chlorine becomes a negatively charged ion (Cl-) after reacting together to form sodium chloride (NaCl).
The word equation for sodium reacting with water is: sodium + water → sodium hydroxide + hydrogen gas.
Sucrose can be decomposed chemically as it is a compound composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms. Sodium is an element, and ethanol is a compound made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms, but water is a compound that cannot be decomposed chemically as it is already in its simplest form.
Sodium I think
One atom of sodium is chemically symbolised (written as) 'Na'
Sodium reacting with water is: 2Na + 2H2O ----> 2NaOH + H2