Yes, it contains both.
The sodium forms an ionic bond with the one oxygen with a single bond (not double) with the carbon, becoming the cation (positive charge). This oxygen and all other atoms in the acetate form covalent bonds.
Sodium acetate is considered to be an ionic compound.
In sodium acetate, there is ionic bond between sodium and acetate ions and there is covalent bond between carbon-hydrogen, carbon-carbon and carbon-oxygen in the acetate ion.
Sodium acetate is considered to be an ionic compound.
In sodium acetate, there is ionic bond between sodium and acetate ions and there is covalent bond between carbon-hydrogen, carbon-carbon and carbon-oxygen in the acetate ion.
Yes. The bond between the sodium and the acetate is ionic.
No, it is a salt, however of strong base and weak acid, which
means it is slightly basic
sodium acetate is soluble in water and ethanol.
The bond between sodium and acetate ion is ionic; the bonds in acetate ion are covalent
C2+H3+Na+O2
yES
ionic
covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity
Sodium forms ionic bonds. Carbon forms covalent bonds.
Ionic.
sodium acetateThe chemical name for NaC2H3O2 is sodium acetate.
No, it is simply the water dissolving the sodium acetate, which is a physical change. There is a physical change when you introduce a seed crystal to the sodium acetate as the bonds in the chemical become different to form a solid. By adding water, you are just dissolving it and then allowing it to become supersaturated through heating.
All organic compounds contain covalent bonds between carbon and hydrogen, and often one or more other elements. A few, such as sodium acetate also contain ionic bonds.
Covalent bonds are common in organic compounds!
Sodium fluoride is an ionic compound, which contains no covalent bonds.
The acetate groups are comprised of covalent bonds, but they are ionically bonded with the calcium.
Sulfur and Oxygen are both non-metals so their chemical bond is a covalent one.
no, sodium is a metal and metals don't form covalent bonds
In lithium acetate, there are ionic bonds between positive lithium ions and negative acetate ions, and within the acetate ions themselves, there are covalent bonds between carbon and oxygen and hydrogen.
Most of them are, though there are a few that are ionic such as sodium acetate and other organic acid salts. These include ionic bonds, but also contain covalent bonds within a polyatomic ion.
Salts do not usually contain covalent bonds e.g. NaCl doesn't.
Organic molecules all contain covalent bonds. It is possible, though not common, to have an ionic bond as well as covalent bonds in a molecule.
No. Although the bonds in H2O are covalent, they are not coordinate covalent bonds.
covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity covalent bonds do not conduct electricity