Sodium Chloride (Na+Cl-) is neither an acid nor a base. It is a neutral salt of Sodium & Chlorine having ionic bond between each Na+ & Cl- ion.
You can take sodium chloride to be pretty much neutral. In water, it dissociates into sodium and chlorine ions. The chlorine acts as a weak Bronsted base (It's the conjugate base of HCl), but the sodium acts a weak bronsted acid (It's the conjugate acid of NaOH).
Yes, chlorine can react with bases to form various chlorine compounds. For example, when chlorine gas reacts with a strong base like sodium hydroxide (NaOH), it forms sodium hypochlorite (NaClO), which is commonly found in bleach.
Sodium (s) and chlorine (g)---> NaCl (s) I don't think either are strong acids or bases.
Clorox bleach is not an acid, is is a base. Specifically it is a dilute solution of water and sodium hypochlorite.
Sodium Carbonate is a base.
Sodium bicarbonate is a base.
Sodium bicarbonate is a base.
Sodium hydroxide is a base.
Sodium selenite is a salt formed by the combination of sodium hydroxide (a base) and selenous acid (an acid). Overall, it is considered to be a neutral compound.
Sodium oxalate is a salt formed from the neutralization reaction between oxalic acid (a weak organic acid) and sodium hydroxide (a strong base). Therefore, sodium oxalate is neither an acid nor a base; it is a salt.
No, table salt (sodium chloride) is the product of a strong acid (hydrochloric acid) and a strong base (sodium hydroxide) reacting together in a neutralization reaction. Weak acids or bases do not produce salts with the same characteristics as sodium chloride.
Base