Sodium and chlorine are elements. If you mean one sodium atom and one chlorine atom yes they would be both isotopes but of different elemnts. If they were randomly sampled from nature the sodium atom would almost certainly be sodium-23 (there is only a trace of sodium-22 found in nature) and the chlorine atom would most likely be chlorine-35 as this isotope is about 75% of chlorine)
An isotonic solution of sodium chloride has a concentration of 9 g/L.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound not an isotope. But:- natural sodium contain the rare radioactive isotope 22Na and the stable isotope 23Na- natural chlorine contain the rare radioactive isotope 36Cl and the stable isotopes 35Cl and 37Cl
30 or 32 neutrons, because chlorine has two isotopes.
Sodium and chlorine will form an ionic bond, where sodium will donate an electron to chlorine, resulting in the formation of sodium chloride (table salt).
Chlorine has a lot of different isotopes but the 2 stable ones are chlorine 35 and chlorine 37
Sodium, copper and aluminum are all metals. Chlorine is not a metal.
For example sodium chloride, NaCl: the chemical symbols of sodium and chlorine.
Most of the chlorine on Earth exists as sodium chloride or common salt. It is the 21st most abundant element in the Earth's crust. Chlorine has two principal isotopes, 35Cl (75.78%) and 37Cl (24.22%).
Sodium + Chlorine ---> Sodium Chloride I think that is correct
Sodium has no radioactive isotopes.
1. Sodium has 20 isotopes and 2 isomers. 2. Only the isotope 23Na is stable. 3. The stable isotope 23Na and the radioactive isotopes 22Na and 24Na (these isotopes exist in traces) are natural isotopes.
Sodium chloride has two atoms in the formula unit (NaCl): sodium and chlorine.