Sodium chloride is not anhydrous when I swim in the ocean. I want it anhydrous when I sprinkle it on my food.
An example of a hygroscopic salt would be calcium chloride, a salt that absorbs water from the atmosphere to form a saturated solution
sodium sulphate anhydrous 9.7 g/l Sodium chloride 4 g/l Dimethylolurea 0.4 - 1.0 g/L Buffered to pH 7.4
Crystalline sodium chloride is an insulator.Liquid or melted sodium chloride is a conductor.
The empirical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl.
60,33417 % chlorine and 39,66583 % sodium
Theformula for anhydrous sodium carbonate is Na2CO3.
Your question appears to lack some necessary detail. Sodium is Na Magnesium Chloride is MgCl2 "What is the equation for sodium and magnesium chloride?" = Na + MgCl2 Is that what you are asking or do mean what is the equation for sodium ___x___ and magnesium chloride? Magnesium chloride appears commercially as a solution in water from 0-35% MgCl2, or an anhydrous solid 98% MgCl2 or hexahydrate solid 47% MgCl2. What is the form of sodium you are trying to use? NaOH? NaCl? ??
Because they are highly hygroscopic compounds and absorb moisture from air.
An example of a hygroscopic salt would be calcium chloride, a salt that absorbs water from the atmosphere to form a saturated solution
Yes, aluminium chloride is a salt.
From 100 to 113 Deg C, barium chloride convert to anhydrous form.
Sncl4
CaCl2
sodium sulphate anhydrous 9.7 g/l Sodium chloride 4 g/l Dimethylolurea 0.4 - 1.0 g/L Buffered to pH 7.4
it doesn't
Anhydrous sodium sulphate is Na2SO4
Sodium chloride has two atoms in the formula unit (NaCl): sodium and chlorine.