Sodium (Na) is a metal.
The two elements that make the compound "salt", are sodium (metal) and chloride (non-metal). These two elements are bonded together to create sodium chloride as we call it "salt". Sodium particle-> O + O <-Chloride particle = Sodium chloride (salt).
No, Calcium acetate is not a molecular compound since it's formed by a combination of nonmetals (C, H, and O) and metal (Ca). Compounds consisting of nonmetals and metals are ionic, metal and metal are metallic compounds, nonmetal and nonmetal is molecular.
Na- sodium O- oxygen Na2O- Sodium oxide
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is polyatomic (contain atoms of Na, O and H).
Sodium hydroxide has the formula NaOH and it contains three atoms, one each of Sodium, Hydrogen and Oxygen.
The two elements that make the compound "salt", are sodium (metal) and chloride (non-metal). These two elements are bonded together to create sodium chloride as we call it "salt". Sodium particle-> O + O <-Chloride particle = Sodium chloride (salt).
ionic = metal + nonmetal covalent = nonmetal + nonmetal So your compound is covalent because P (Phosphorus) is a nonmetal and O (oxygen) is a nonmetal.
Yes-Mn is a metal while O is a nonmetal.
Ammonia is a compound of nitrogen and hydrogen. It is a colourless gas.
Short answer both ionic and covalent! The bond between the sodium (metal) and phosphate (PO43-) (nonmetal) is ionic. The bonds between the phosphorous (nonmetal) and the oxygen (nonmetal) atoms are all covalent. The trick is to treat a covalent compound (PO43-, CO32-, etc) as grouped together when balancing charges, looking for ionic bonds, etc.
2benzene-CH2OH+2Na --> 2benzene-CH2-O-Na+ H2I
well C is carbon, carbon is a nonmetal H is hydrogen and it's also a nonmetal when you have two nonmetal it is a COVALENT compound when you have a metal and a nonmetal it is IONIC compound example: NaAr sodium and argon one is a metal and on is a nonmetal
Aluminium Oxide is not a metal. Nor is it a non-metal. It is a compound formed from a metal [Aluminium] and a non-metal [Oxygen] The terms metal and non-metal are reserved for the elements that appear on the Periodic Table.
Chlorine can form both ionic and covalent bonds, depending on what it is bonded with. If bonded with a metal, it will form an ionic bond. If bonded with a non-metal, it will form a covalent bond.
No, Calcium acetate is not a molecular compound since it's formed by a combination of nonmetals (C, H, and O) and metal (Ca). Compounds consisting of nonmetals and metals are ionic, metal and metal are metallic compounds, nonmetal and nonmetal is molecular.
It's not on the periodic table ^ not really true. SO isn't but S is Sulfur which is a nonmetal, and O is Oxygen which is also a nonmetal.
What you have written is gibberish.Na is sodium, a metal. Co is cobalt, a metal. These are very different metals. In this context the 3 is meaningless.If perhaps you meant CO3 (captal O) that is carbonate: C is carbon, O is oxygen, and the 3 means three of the oxygen atoms are bound to the one carbon atom.If you meant NaCO3 this is a nonexistent compound of the metal sodium with carbonate.Na2CO3 is the compound sodium carbonate (washing soda), with two sodium atoms bound to one carbonate.NaHCO3 is the compound sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), with one sodium atom and one hydrogen atom bound to one carbonate.