No, toothpaste is a very complex mixture.
Toothpaste is mostly abrasives, detergents, a source of fluoride, and flavorings. Toothpastes are available withoutany fluoride too, especially for young children as they might swallow the toothpaste and too much fluoride causes brown spots on the teeth and can even be toxic. Other ingredients may include antibacterials, remineralizers, antidrying agents, desensitizing agents, etc.
Abrasives used include hydrated silica (which can be made from sand), hydrated alumina, calcium carbonate, and dicalcium phosphates. None of these materials would have any cleaning effect on teeth without the scrubbing action of a toothbrush.
The most common source of fluoride is the salt sodium fluoride, but the salt tin fluoride (stannous fluoride), the organic salt olaflur, and the salt sodium monofluorophosphate (Na2PO3F) are also used.
Sodium fluoride is an electrolyte. It can be found in certain things such as toothpaste. It is an inorganic compound.
Fluoride is an ion of the element fluorine. So it is not a compound. However sometimes the compound sodium fluoride, a common ingredient in toothpaste, is simply referred to a fluoride.
Fluoride itself is a monatmic ion of the element fluorine. It must be paired with a positive ion to form a compound. The fluoride in toothpaste is sodium fluoride. Some people confuse fluoride with the mineral fluorite (calcium fluoride), which is a compound.
No. Toothpaste is usually less than 1% sodium fluoride. Pure sodium fluoride would be highly toxic.
Toothpaste contains 20 - 42% water. Around half of the compounds are abrasives like alum1inum hydroxide, calcium carbonate, calcium hydrogen phosphates, silica's, zeolites, and hydroxyapatite. It also contains fluoride in various forms like sodium fluoride.
sodium fluoride
Sodium fluoride is the only compound in sodium fluoride.
Toothpaste and mouthwash often contain sodium fluoride.
Sodium fluoride is an ionic compound with the formula NaF.
Fluoride on its own is not a substance, it is an ion. Specifically it is a fluorine atom with an extra electron, giving it a negative charge. To make a complete substance it must be paired with a positive ion. The "fluoride" in toothpaste is usually sodium fluoride, a compound of sodium and fluorine. Fluorine on its own is an element.
Sodium Fluoride is an Ionic Compound. It's Fluorine and Sodium with the formula NaF.
This toothpastes contain sodium fluoride (NaF), tin fluoride (SnF2), sodium monofluorophosphate(NaPO3F), etc. as fluoride source.