Sodium is a natural atom, and it reacts very happily with any giving atomic structure: note Sodium chloride, salt.
Yes, sodium is an element that can be found naturally in the Earth's crust and in many minerals. It is a highly reactive metal and is commonly found in compounds such as sodium chloride (table salt) and sodium bicarbonate (baking soda).
Sodium fluoride contain 1 sodium atom and 1 fluorine atom.
A stable sodium atom has 11 electrons.
A sodium atom becomes a sodium ion, when a neutron is added to the nucleus.
Yes, the cation Na+.
the total number of subshell for a sodium atom is 4.
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)
yes sodiom atom is an isolated one it is the atom of sodium sodium chloride is salt
Sodium carbonate is made from the positive ion of sodium electrostatically bound to the negative carbonate ion. The water molecule has positive and negative regions with the hydrogen atom and oxygen atom respectively. Therefore, sodium carbonate is "supported" in its electrostatic nature by the water, therefore, it dissolves.
No. It is an element. Although you can have one atom of sodium.
No. A cesium atom is larger both in terms of atomic mass and atomic radius.
A sodium ion differs from a sodium atom in that the sodium ion has a missing electron electron. It has a positive charge, as opposed to the atom, which is neutral.
Sodium Atom
there are 11.99 neutrons in an atom of sodium
The sodium atom gives an electron to the chlorine atom to make the sodium and chloride ions respectively. Then they form ionic bonds forming sodium chloride.
An atom of sodium has one valence electron. When a sodium atom loses this electron to another atom, it becomes a sodium ion.
yes, it is! It is an atom. :)
An atom