They are neutral.
The water solution of sodium chloride is neutral; the solid NaCl is neutral. After dissociation are formed the cation Na+ and the anion Cl-.
in their natural state, Na and Cl are neutral, unstable. When reacting, Na will lose an electron to Cl, and the resulting Na+ is eletrostatically attracted to Cl-. In the end, two neutral unstable compounds form a single polar, stable compound that is neither reactive like sodium or toxic like chlorine
If it is sodium chloride NaCl: Na+ and Cl- are both neutral ions, they do not (and cannot) donate or gain protons from or to water.
The oxidation number of Cl in NaOCl is +1. This is because Na has an oxidation number of +1 and O has an oxidation number of -2, so the oxidation number of Cl must be +1 in order for the overall charge of NaOCl to be neutral.
Sodium Chloride (Na+Cl-) is neither an acid nor a base. It is a neutral salt of Sodium & Chlorine having ionic bond between each Na+ & Cl- ion.
Sodium chloride is a lattice.Sodium ion is the positive ion.
Sodium chloride solution is neutral; NaCl is a salt.
its either positive or neutral
2: Na+, Cl-
Because the sodium chloride salt has equal amount of Na+ and Cl-. NaCl has the relation of 1:1. This is the reaction that happens when you dissolve NaCl in water: NaCl <---> Na+ + Cl- As you can see equal amount of positive and negative ions is formed.
NaCl---------------→Na+ + Cl-