Sodium chloride isn't an organic compound.
It is organic substance
protoplasmic
Table salt, sodium chloride (NaCl), is not considered an organic compound since, by definition, organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds, and sodium chloride contains no carbon atoms.
The most common substance to all cells are organic molecules. It is carbon that makes for all of life's organic compounds.
Organic compounds are materials derived from living things. Trees, bushes and the like die and decay and become soil. Soil is organic. Inorganic simply means non-organic, or not derived from living things. Salt is a substance made of two elements, (sodium and chlorine ),that occurs naturally, but was obviously never living. So salt is a natural substance but not an organic one.
The general term is "solvent" There are organic solvents (toluene, acetone, ether, etc), and there are inorganic solvents (water).
No, organic molecules contain carbon atoms covalently bonded to other elements and table salt (NaCl) has no carbon in it. Table salt (Sodium Chloride) is made of the two elements of Sodium and Chlorine.
water oxygen salt orgasms........dumps
No, an eyeball is not a molecule. But the organic substance that makes up our bodies, including eyes, is composed of molecules.
The presence of carbon or hydrocarbons in a molecule usually means it is an organic molecule. Organic molecules are usually more complex than inorganic molecules.
The cytoplasm is a jelly-like substance composed of water, salt, and other organic molecules and is simply a medium for the organelles to move around in, just as the air we live in.
sample of complex organic molecules