Partially, since sodium is technically a metal.
Salt is an ionic compound consisting of a metal and a non metal.
In case of common salt, chlorine and sodium. In case of any other salt, a metal and a non-metal.
A salt could be formed by an alkali metal and a(n)
salt
There are hundreds of salts. A metal atom forms an ionic bond to a non metal atom, this is called a salt. ZnF2, zinc fluoride is a salt. Table salt is NaCl, there is no zinc in it.
metal + acid -> salt + water metal + oxygen -> metal oxide metal oxide + acid -> salt + water metal + water -> metal hydroxide + hydrogen Metal + Steam -> Metal Oxide + Hydrogen Metal + Acid -> Metal salt + Hydrogen
Common table salt is NaCl I think, hence the metal of the salt will be sodium (Na)
Salt is an ionic compound consisting of a metal and a non metal.
In case of common salt, chlorine and sodium. In case of any other salt, a metal and a non-metal.
When an acid reacts with a metal, we get a salt and hydrogen.
acid+ metal oxide --> salt + water
it can be tested in the following way- metal carbonate+acid=metal salt+carbon dioxide+water
The answer is during a metal reaction to acid, it makes salt and hydrogen. Another way is Acid + Metal > Metal Salt + Hydrogen
acid + metal carbonate--> Salt+ Carbon dioxide+ water
No
salt is an ionic compound of the metal sodium (Na) and the nonmetal clorine (Cl)
NaCl - table salt (there are many salts) Na - Alkali metal Cl - Halogen