There should be at least two atoms of two elements in a salt.
There are two elements, nitrogen and oxygen. There are seven total atoms, two nitrogen atoms and five oxygen atoms.
there are 5 atoms (1Na 1Cl and 3O) and they are all elements.
Two elements...Three Caesium atoms and two Nitrogen atoms
Common table salt is Sodium Chloride ( NaCl ) and has no hydrogen atoms.
There are four atoms. It contains N and H atoms.
An element is a composition of many atoms. Thus you can hold NaCl (salt) in your hand. You can't hold the atoms it makes up.
An element is a composition of many atoms. Thus you can hold NaCl (salt) in your hand. You can't hold the atoms it makes up.
3 elements Added: Glucose? Will use that example. C6H12O6 6 atoms of carbon. 12 atoms of hydrogen. 6 atoms of oxygen. The full tally of the three elements is glucose a common sugar and carbohydrate.
Table salt is composed of atoms from 2 elements: Sodium & Chlorine, so table salt is a compound.
This is a salt containing only atoms from only two elements: example: sodium fluoride - NaF.
There are two elements, nitrogen and oxygen. There are seven total atoms, two nitrogen atoms and five oxygen atoms.
there are 5 atoms (1Na 1Cl and 3O) and they are all elements.
Two elements...Three Caesium atoms and two Nitrogen atoms
Common table salt is Sodium Chloride ( NaCl ) and has no hydrogen atoms.
There are four atoms. It contains N and H atoms.
No, organic molecules contain carbon atoms covalently bonded to other elements and table salt (NaCl) has no carbon in it. Table salt (Sodium Chloride) is made of the two elements of Sodium and Chlorine.
3 different elements, silver carbon and oxygen. 6 atoms total.