Yes, salt water contain sodium chloride.
Salt water is a solution, it does not have a single chemical formula.
Salt (NaCl) is very soluble in water.
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
Water and salt form a solution, not a mixture. All solutions of NaCl in water are "salt water," but if you get the concentration of NaCl over 3.5 percent they prefer to use the term brine.
Salt in water solution is dissociated: NaCl-------Na+ + Cl-
Simple: - water with salt is H2O plus NaCl - water without salt is H2O
Sodium chloride is a solute when is dissolved in water (the solvent).
- NaCl is a salt- NaCl is an ionic compound- NaCl is dissociated in water- Nacl is chemically stable
Of course, the salt (NaCl)
Salt (NaCl) is extracted from mines or sea water.
No, it is not. Salt water is NaCl and H2O, while ethanol is C2H5OH.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine. Industrially NaCl is extracted from sea water or salt mines.