oxygen, all the halogens, most acids, and many other substances, including several negative-valence radicals. Almost anything capable of carrying a negative valence can react with Sodium.
some examples
with Chlorine: Na + Cl -->NaCl
with Nitric acid: Na + 2HNO3 --> NaNO3 + H20 + NO2
In the reaction where Na is oxidized to Na+ in a chemical reaction, the oxidation state of Na changes from 0 to +1. This means that Na loses one electron and is oxidized.
It is not a chemical reaction, it is only a dissociation reaction:NaCl-------------------------Na+ + Cl-
The reaction is:2 Na + 2 H2O = 2 NaOH + H2
No. It is a physical process, so it technically isn't a reaction.
Sodium chloride is dissociated in water: NaCl---------------------Na+ + Cl-
The chemical equation for the reaction of metal sodium with oxygen in air is 4Na + O2 -> 2Na2O.
For example a single displacement reaction is:2 Na + 2 HCl = 2 NaCl + H2
reaction of na [sodium] with water or air
sodium and chlorine (Na and Cl) chemically combine
The chemical equation representing this reaction is 2Na + 2H2O → 2NaOH + H2.
In a chemical reaction, sodium (Na) can become positively charged by losing an electron, hence it can be considered as a positive ion in certain contexts.
Chemical formula of:tin is Snsalt is Na+aq and Cl-aqwater is H2OThere is no equation because there is no reaction!