table salt = sodium chloride. Note: would not recommend making one's own salt, since both separate parts are highly toxic.
Yes, it can, and it combines with many other elements. The most common example is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
Common salt, or table salt is sodium chloride, so you would combine sodium with chlorine.
Sodium is an element. It appears on the periodic table as an element. (NA - 11) Sodium is also a mineral.
sodium is an element
In the older versions of the periodic table, group VIIA corresponds to the current group 17, the halogens.
This element is chlorine (Cl).
This element is chlorine (Cl).
This element is chlorine (Cl).
This element is sodium (Na).
Very common - sodium is found in table salt, for instance.
Sodium combines with Chlorine in a 1:1 ratio to make common, pure, table salt. Sodium by its self is reactive, and should be handled very carefully I know.
Yes, it can, and it combines with many other elements. The most common example is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
Table salt is formed from sodium ion ( an alkali metal) and chloride ion ( a halogen)
Common salt, or table salt is sodium chloride, so you would combine sodium with chlorine.
Table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
NaCl A sodium cation (Na+) combines with a chlorine anion (Cl-) to form NaCl.
Sodium is an element. It appears on the periodic table as an element. (NA - 11) Sodium is also a mineral.