Table salt (sodium chloride) is formed by ionic bond,where the metal (sodium) loses one electron from its outer most energy level and changes into a positive ion and the nonmetal (chlorine) gains the electron lost by sodium and changes into a negative ion.A strong electrical attraction between the positive and the negative ions occure forming sodium chloride (table salt). NA+CL=NACL.
Salts are ionic compounds which means they have ionic bonds (a bond between a metal and a non-metal)
Via an ionic bond
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
You'd get sodium chloride ("salt").
There are two elements bonded together is sodium chloride: NaCl is made of sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-)
The components of sodium chloride (sodium and chlorine) are chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio and definite structure. A mixture does not have these traits.
Sodium chloride won't react with much, if anything, because it already was bonded together to become stable......Na+ bonds with a Cl-
Definitely not! Chlorhexidine is organic and covalently bonded while sodium chloride is inorganic and ionically bonded.
The two elements that make the compound "salt", are sodium (metal) and chloride (non-metal). These two elements are bonded together to create sodium chloride as we call it "salt". Sodium particle-> O + O <-Chloride particle = Sodium chloride (salt).
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a compound because sodium and chlorine are chemically bonded.
Sodium chloride is a compound of sodium and chlorine (these elements are bonded together) not a mixture with separated elements.
Hydrogen and chlorine are both nonmetals, and nonmetals form molecular compounds when bonded together. Sodium is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal, and a metal and a nonmetal form an ionic compound.
NaCl is made up of Sodium and Chlorine. The correct chemical name for it is Sodium Chloride.
The new compound is called "sodium chloride", has the formula NaCl, and has ionic bonds.
Bonding in NaCl is ionic bond.