Hydrogen, sodium, & potassium.
Na is sodium, and Cl is chlorine. They are two elements, and when combined form Sodium Chloride, or table salt. Na is sodium, and Cl is chlorine. They are two elements, and when combined form Sodium Chloride, or table salt.
Sodium and Chlorine (Will become sodium chloride)
Almost all the time, unless it is combined with other elements such as sodium.
chlorine is not a compound. it is an element.
Chlorine is never found free in nature. It is always combined with another or other elements into compounds. Chlorine is highly reactive, and it wants to borrow an electron from just anything it can get close to. In general, it actually wants to "steal" that electron to form an ionic bond, and sodium chloride (NaCl), which is table salt, is one example of a common chlorine compound.
Oxygen and chlorine are each elements, not compounds. They combined to form a number of covalent compounds because they are both nonmetals.
When combined, they create sodium chloride (table salt).
no, it is two elements that are combined into a compound. look at the name. ammonium which is nitrogen and 3 hydrogen combined. and chloride which is the element chlorine.
Cobalt react with oxygen, sulfur, fluorine, chlorine, carbon, nitrogen etc.
The phases of matter are its physical properties. Salt is made of of elements that have combined chemically. They are sodium and chlorine, that combine to create the compound which is known as table sale.
Just about every element except for the noble gasses can combine with chlorine. Commonly it is combined with sodium (to form table salt) and hydrogen (to form hydrochloric acid)
No, cesium and chlorine are not considered organic compounds. Organic compounds are those that contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, whereas cesium and chlorine are elements without carbon-hydrogen bonds.