Chloride is a term used for salts. Chlorine is a chemical element, nonmetallic.
Chloride isn't a substance in its own right. It is an ion formed by the element chlorine, which is a nonmetal.
Phosphorous trichloride (PCl3) is a chemical compound; no metal, nonmetal or metalloid.
Cl (chlorine) is a nonmetal.
Chloride is a non-mental
nonmetal
Sodium chloride contains the metal sodium and the non metal chlorine.
Aluminum chloride is not a metal. When a metal (Aluminum) is compounded with a nonmetal (Chloride) the resulting compound is no longer a metal.It is an example of an inorganic compound that "cracks" at mild temperature, reversibly changing from a polymer to a monomer.
Hydrogen and chlorine are both nonmetals, and nonmetals form molecular compounds when bonded together. Sodium is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal, and a metal and a nonmetal form an ionic compound.
Calcium Chloride is an ionic compound. You see, for a substance to be classified as either a non-metal or a metal, it has to be in elemental form. Calcium Chloride is a compound, so you can't say whether it is a non-metal or a metal. However, of the elements that make up this compound, Calcium is a metal and Chlorine is a non-metal.
Metal, 1) its silvery (shiny) and it is a solid, and all metals are solids, with one exceptiuon mercury. Remember that a few metals are not silvery such as copper, gold. And some metals are soft, such as sodium, gallium, indium, potassium.
No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
Sodium chloride contains the metal sodium and the non metal chlorine.
No. Clacium chloride is a chemical compound. Calcium itself, though, is a metal, while chlorine is a nonmetal.
yes, because it is an ionic compund, made of the ionic bond of sodium and chloride. an ionic bond is between a metal and a nonmetal and sodium is a metal while chloride is a nonmetal.
The first is the metal, the second is the nonmetal with the suffix -ide; ex.: sodium chloride.
Aluminum chloride is not a metal. When a metal (Aluminum) is compounded with a nonmetal (Chloride) the resulting compound is no longer a metal.It is an example of an inorganic compound that "cracks" at mild temperature, reversibly changing from a polymer to a monomer.
Hydrogen and chlorine are both nonmetals, and nonmetals form molecular compounds when bonded together. Sodium is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal, and a metal and a nonmetal form an ionic compound.
No, sodium chloride is classified as a salt. It is a compound fo sodium, a metal, and chlorine, a nonmetal.
Calcium Chloride is an ionic compound. You see, for a substance to be classified as either a non-metal or a metal, it has to be in elemental form. Calcium Chloride is a compound, so you can't say whether it is a non-metal or a metal. However, of the elements that make up this compound, Calcium is a metal and Chlorine is a non-metal.
The two elements that make the compound "salt", are sodium (metal) and chloride (non-metal). These two elements are bonded together to create sodium chloride as we call it "salt". Sodium particle-> O + O <-Chloride particle = Sodium chloride (salt).
Metal first and ide added to nonmetal trailer. Sodium chloride. ============
NaCl Sodium chloride, common table salt. A metal nonmetal bond and the (metal) cation, Na +, has donated an electron to the (nonmetal) anion, Cl -.