Sodium chloride does not have molecules unless it is dissolved in water (aq), where it would contain water molecules.
Sodium choride is a salt, therefore it has an ionic bond.
When a metal (such as sodium) and a non-metal (such as chlorine) form a compound, you would assume that they make an ionic bond since their electro negativity would be very different.
When two non-metals form a bond (such as dihydrogen monoxide) it would normally be in a covalent bond, and they would be categorized as molecules.
There are approximately 0.5 moles of NaCl in 29.22 grams. This would be 3.01 x 10^23 molecules of NaCl.
In the formula unit (NaCl) are 28 protons.
1,000,000,000,000,000,000 1 Quintilian
First- NaCl is not a molecular compound. Second you can't have fractioanl molecules. Do you mean Moles??
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The answer is 4,328.1023formula units (not molecules).
There are 1.946 moles of NaCl in 1.946 moles of NaCl. Each mole of NaCl contains Avogadro's number of molecules, which is approximately 6.022 x 10^23.
In 2NaCl, there are two atoms of sodium per molecule of NaCl. Therefore, there are 2 atoms of sodium in 2 NaCl molecules.
The answeis is 3,82.1010 formula units (this expression is more corresct for ionic compounds).
Dissolving NaCl in water is a physical change, not a chemical change. The NaCl molecules remain the same chemically, but the arrangement of the particles changes as they interact with water molecules.
Sodium chloride is an ionic crystalline salt, and does not form molecules. One unit of sodium chloride is called a functional unit. It is the lowest whole number ratio of ions represented in an ionic compound. 1 mole = 6.022 x 1023 formula units of NaCl 3 moles NaCl x 6.022 x 1023 formula units/mole = 1.8 x 1024 formula units of NaCl
When NaCl is dissolved in H2O, it is a physical change because no new substances are formed. The NaCl molecules are simply separated and dispersed in the water molecules, but the chemical composition remains the same.