like in pools, it keeps em clean ;]
Chlorine oxide would be a covalent compound, and not an ionic compound.
Chlorine gas (Cl2) is covalent.
Lithium combines with chlorine to form lithium chloride which is an ionic compound.
Chlorine is an element.
Cl3 is the chemical formula for chlorine gas, which is a compound made up of chlorine atoms.
Chlorine is a nonmetal but its is an element, not a compound.
The binary compound of potassium and chlorine is potassium chloride, which has the chemical formula KCl. In this compound, potassium has a +1 charge and chlorine has a -1 charge, resulting in a neutral compound.
No. Chlorine gas is 100% chlorine and nothing else.
When compounding magnesium and chlorine you get the compound, magnesium chloride, MgCl2, dissolved in seawater, is an abundant, natural source of the very useful metal magnesium. Magnesium is a common component of alloys. Alloys are produced by combining a pure metal with one or more other elements to form a new substance with desirable properties.
Yes, sodium chloride (NaCL, table salt) is a very known and useful mineral.
Technically no. Zinc chloride is a compound. Zinc chlorine really isn't anything.
A compound containing potassium and chlorine is called potassium chloride.