Yes because Sodium Chloride dissociates completely into the water as ions
Any sample within the solution should measure the same amount of Na+ and Cl- and H2O
Sodium chloride is not mixture, it is compound.
NaCl is homogeneos
Sodium chloride (table salt) is a compound - NaCl.
AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) --> AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq)
If you mean pure substances then:HCl(aq) and NaCl(aq) are not pure substances but solutions. The (aq) means the substance is dissolved in water.HCl(g) and NaCl(s) is are pure substances
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
homogenous mixture
Pure Water
it is not homogeneous mixture...
homogenous mixture
nope, its a homogenous mixture
it is an homogenous mixture....maybe(:
No. It must have the same number of each as reactants and products. AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) -> AgCl(aq) + NaNO3(aq)
Salt mixed with water will form aqueus sodium chloride, NaCl (aq). The chemical formula for this is NaCl.H2o