The solute is of course sodium chloride (NaCl) and the solvent is generally water.
Sodium chloride is the solute and water is the solvent.
Aqueous solutions are typically named based on the solute dissolved in water. The name of the solute is followed by the word "solution" to indicate that it is dissolved in water. For example, a solution of salt dissolved in water can be named "sodium chloride solution."
The two components of a solution are solute and solvent. Solute is the substance being dissolved in the solution, while solvent is the substance doing the dissolving. For example, in a saltwater solution, salt is the solute and water is the solvent.
no, sodium chloride is the chemical name for table salt.
Table salt is sodium chloride, or NaCl. It might also be called halite (which is the name of sodium chloride crystals considered as a mineral), though that's more the geological name for salt).
The chemical name of sodium chloride is sodium chloride. The formula is NaCl.
The process is called electrolysis of aqueous sodium chloride, which involves passing an electric current through a solution of sodium chloride (salt) dissolved in water (aqueous solution). This process results in the decomposition of the sodium chloride into its constituent elements, sodium and chlorine gas, at the cathode and anode, respectively.
The name of the ionic compound NaCl is Sodium Chloride. =)
The IUPAC name of sodium chloride is "sodium chloride". But it is commonly known as table salt.
it is a bond between sodium and chloride dissolved in some liquid
The chemical name for sodium chloride is sodium chloride. It is composed of one sodium ion (Na+) and one chloride ion (Cl−) held together by an ionic bond.
Sodium chloride is the chemical name for common table salt