Table salt is a compound.
Sand is a mixture and rarely is only one compound.
i think its a compound.
A compound. As a solid, table salt consists of sodium cations (Na+) and chlorine anions (Cl-) which are arranged into a giant ionic lattice structure (which is held in place by the electrostatic attraction between the opposite charges on the ions) - the structure does not conduct electricity. In solution, this structure is lost as the salt dissolves; the oppositely charged ions are free to move about and pass each other, enabling the solution to conduct electricity. I would say that in solution or in a 'mixture' - depending on whether it is saturated, that it is a homogenous mixture as there is no physical difference in the state of the components of the mixture. Na+Cl-
Gold is an element (79 on the periodic table of elements). Thats why you mine gold not make it!
No, it is a pure substance.
Table salt is a compound.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) its a compound, an ionic salt.
NaCl is a compound known as the table salt.
Sand is a mixture and rarely is only one compound.
You did not mention a mixture of 'what' and table salt. On the chance that you meant, "Water", then the compound called, "salt" is in solution with water up to the saturation point. After that, any added salt will simply fall to the bottom of the container, and not go into solution.
The solution of salt in water is a homogeneous mixture.This is because the mixture contain two components: sal and water.
It is a compound.
Table sugar is a compound.
Table sugar (sucrose) is a chemical compound not a mixture.
Not in table salt it can be if because salt is going to be a positive ion from a basic solution and a negative ion from an acidic solution and if aluminum hydroxide is your basic solution and you have some other acid then your salt will contain aluminum.
anything that is not in the periodic table probably contains more than one kind element. steel, plastic, rubber are all examples
Table salt (NaCl) is a compound not a mixture.