Yes salt is formed from ionic bonding of a cation and an anion.
Yes the anion Cl- comes from hydrochloric acid
Yes
An ionic compojund made up of the cation from a base and the anion from an acid qualifies a compound as a salt.
Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
No, An electrolyte is typically an ionic compound, and acid, or a base.
The combination of the cation of a base and the anion of an acid forms a compound called a salt. This is the result of an acid-base reaction in chemistry. For example, hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide react to form the salt sodium chloride and water.
The resulting salt from the reaction.
No, it is not a salt. For example: ACID = H-(anion) BASE = (cation)-OH A salt is obtained from a reaction between an ACID and a BASE: ACID + BASE -> (anion)(cation) + H-OH (anion)(cation) is a salt, a ionic compound An acid is a covalent compound
An ionic compojund made up of the cation from a base and the anion from an acid qualifies a compound as a salt.
AgNO3 is a soluble ionic compound of silver.
Neither, NaCl is a simple ionic compound that dissolves completely in water yielding a neutral solution. Na+ is the cation and Cl- is the anion.
Hydrochloric is not an ionic compound, in fact, its full name is hydrochloric acid, which leads us to the conclusion that it is an acid.
This is Ammonium acetate and it's an ionic compound. The first element in an Ionic compound's formula is usually a metal because ionic compounds consist of a cation and an anion binding. The only common exception to this rule is is ammonium. Not only is it ionic but its a polyatomic ionic compound.
Ionic Molecular
Sulfuric acid is a molecular compound.
Silver sulfide is composed of silver, a metal, and sulfur, a non-metal; therefore, it is an ionic compound and a salt.
Citric acid is a covalent compound!
HCl
In short, no, sodium is technically classified as an alkali metal. Chlorine is a non-metal, however, so it is made of at least one non-metal.