NaCl is an ionic compound
Sodium Na + and Cl- Cholrine form an ionic compound
No. This is an ionic compound and the electron of sodium is donated into the electron shell of chlorine. Na + ( the cation ) and Cl - ( the anion ) form the ionic compound NaCl, sodium chloride.
sodium chloride is an ionic compound. it has reacted so it's not a mixture. It is a ionic compound because Na is a metal and Cl is a non-metal
Na^(+) + Cl^(-) = NaCl(s)
because Na passes it electron of its last shell to cl and follows octet rule thus an ionic compound na-cl+ is formed
Sodium Na + and Cl- Cholrine form an ionic compound
(Na)+ (Cl)-
It is an Ionic compound just as water is.
NaCl is a molecule composed of two atoms Na and Cl.
Back is for salt
No. This is an ionic compound and the electron of sodium is donated into the electron shell of chlorine. Na + ( the cation ) and Cl - ( the anion ) form the ionic compound NaCl, sodium chloride.
For cations + (ex.: Na+); for anions - (ex.: Cl-).
Ionic bonds are between a metal and a nonmetal. Covalent bonds are between a non-metal and a non-metal. Na (metal) + Cl (non-metal) = ionic Cl (non-metal) + Cl (nonmetal) = covalent
sodium chloride is an ionic compound. it has reacted so it's not a mixture. It is a ionic compound because Na is a metal and Cl is a non-metal
because Na passes it electron of its last shell to cl and follows octet rule thus an ionic compound na-cl+ is formed
Na^(+) + Cl^(-) = NaCl(s)
no becuz NaCl has a metal in it which is sodium and molecular compounds involve non metals e.g. hydrogen peroxide is a molecular compound