Sodium chloride hasn't allotropic forms.
Another forms, if you want: pure or impure, iodized or not, fine grinded or coarse, for human use or animal use, with condiments or not, etc.
NaCl forms ionic bonds.
nacl
Na2+ + Cl2- = NaCl so NaCl is the answer.
Yes. When NaCl is added to water, it forms a solution, which is a homogeneous mixture.
NaCl forms an ionic crystal structure rather than molecules.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.
A sodium ion. Cation. Na+ A chlorine ion. Anion Cl- Forms NaCl, sodium chloride.
NaCl
This element is chlorine; sodium chloride is NaCl.
Sodium chloride is NaCl because sodium (Na) forms the positive ion and chlorine (Cl) forms the negative ion and the two combine in a 1:1 ratio.
The answer would be Sodium Chloride (NaCl)
NaCl doesn't have a molecular geometry because it is not a molecule. NaCl is an ionic compound that forms a face-centered-cubic lattice of alternating positive (Na+) and negative (Cl-) ions.