None, as there is no chrome in NaCL.
Each sodium will transfer 1 electron. So, for NaCl, one electron is transferred. In Na2SO4 (sodium sulfate), 2 electrons will be transferred (1 electron from each sodium).
One electron is transferred from each sodium to each chloride.
Only one electron is transferred.
Only one, from sodium to chlorine.
In a combination reaction between sodium (Na) and chlorine, electrons are transferred from sodium to chlorine. This results in the formation of sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-), which then combine to form sodium chloride (NaCl) through ionic bonding.
1
1
It is an electrostatic attraction, not a transfer.
In the ionic bond between sodium and chlorine in NaCl, one electron is transferred from the sodium atom to the chlorine atom. Sodium becomes positively charged and chlorine becomes negatively charged, forming the ionic bond.
The bond formed between sodium and chloride, where the electron is transferred from sodium to chloride, is called an ionic bond. This bond is formed between a metal (sodium) and a non-metal (chloride) through the transfer of electrons.
The single valence electron of a neutral sodium atom is transferred to the valence shell of a neutral chlorine atom to form the stated bond; therefore, the answer is 1.
No, NaF contains ionic bonds. Ionic bonds are formed between the sodium (Na) cation and the fluoride (F) anion, in which electrons are transferred from sodium to fluorine. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms, which is not the case in NaF.