Only sodium chloride is an inorganic compound.
NaCl is a Sodium Chloride molecule,and is a Polar Bond.
Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, ammonia, carbon monoxide, calcium phosphate etc
Sodium chloride is an example of a salt or an ionic compound. It is both.
Salt (Sodium chloride).
An ion is any atom or molecule that carries a charge. Ions can be organic molecules, containing carbon, or in organic. An example of an inorganic ion is the sodium and chloride ions that dissociate as table salt dissolves in water.
Sodium chloride is an inorganic compound, an ionic salt.
Chloride of what? The word chloride can refer to a chemical compound in which one or more chlorine atoms are covalently bonded in the molecule. This means that chlorides can be either inorganic or organic compounds. The simplest example of an inorganic covalently-bonded chloride is hydrogen chloride, HCl (a colorless acid). A simple example of an organic covalently-bonded (an organochloride) chloride is chloromethane (CH3Cl), often called methyl chloride (a colorless gas). Sodium Chloride is (as a monocrystalline solid) colorless but as a powder, opaque.
Sodium chloride is an example of an inorganic ionic salt.
Sodium chloride is a a polar molecule.
Sodium chloride is an inorganic salt, an ionic salt, colorless, very soluble in water.
Water is a non-example of lipids. Lipids are organic molecules that include fats, oils, and cholesterol that are insoluble in water, whereas water is a simple inorganic molecule that is essential for various biological processes but is not classified as a lipid.
sodium chloride, hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, lithium chloride, gallium arsenide, titanium dioxide