Sodium chloride is NaCl.
Sodium gluconate is NaC6H11O7.
Sodium chloride is NaCl and sodium sulfate is Na2SO4; the anion is different.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
sodium chloride as a compound has different physical and chemical properties than sodium and chloride not mixed together
Sodium chloride is NaCl, calcium chloride is CaCl2. Consequently all the physical and chemical properties are different.
Sodium iodide is NaI, sodium chloride is NaCl; the anion is different.
Sodium chloride contains sodium ions, not metallic sodium. Hence they show different chemical properties and behaviour.
The anion is different: CO3(2-) in carbonate and Cl- in the chloride.
Sodium chloride and chlorhexidine are very different compounds.
No. Sodium chloride is quite different from either of its component elements.
yes, salt is sodium chloride
In practicality, none. It is fairly simple chemistry. Potassim (K) typically does not just exist naturally as itself. It is usually is bonded with some other elements or substance. In the case of Potassium Pills, it is bonded with chloride and you get KCl. Potassium Gluconate just uses a a gluconate molecule instead of a Cl to bind it to. You may compare this to Na Cl or Sodium Chloride (Table Salt). You never eat sodium alone, it is always in combination with Chloride. The reason in short is that when Potassium is combined with another chemical it becomes charged positive (K+) and this is useful for your body. Any supplement you buy that contains Potassium, whether it be Potassium Gluconate or Potassium Chloride, are most often the same.
because one says chloride and the other says hydroxide