Sodium chloride is ionic.
It is both an ionic and polar molecule.
Sodium chloride is not a molecule, it is a crystalline solid in which the sodium cations and chloride anions are present in a 1: 1 ratio. The smallest particle that represents sodium chloride is a formula unit.
Rubidium by itself is neither ionic nor covalent. When it forms bonds with other elements, it forms ionic bonds.
it is ionic, soluble in polar solutes the reason it will not dissolve in water is dure to the nature of fluorides not wanting to let go of their cations
polar covalent
Sodium bicarbonate is an ionic compound.
Yes. Sodium chloride is a polar molecule.Take that last answer with a grain of .... If you are trying to decide whether or not the bond is ionic or polar covalent, I would choose ionic. The two atoms have very different electronegativities; the chlorine takes the electron from sodium, becoming Cl-, and leaving the sodium Na+.
Magnesium chloride has an ionic bond.
Sodium chloride is polar.
Because sodium chloride and water are ionic compounds.
It is both an ionic and polar molecule.
Sodium chloride is an ionic, polar compound.
Sodium chloride exists as Na+ and Cl-. So it is ionic in solid state and in solutions and is polar.
Water is polar. NaCl is polar. Polar substances are soluble in polar solvents.
Sodium chloride is not a molecule, it is a crystalline solid in which the sodium cations and chloride anions are present in a 1: 1 ratio. The smallest particle that represents sodium chloride is a formula unit.
Water is a polar solvent and NaCl is an ionic compound.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond because a big electrostatic attraction between ions of sodium and chlorine exist.