Want this question answered?
Sodium doesn't dissolve in water, it reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide and hydrogen: sodium + water ----> sodium hydroxide + hydrogen
Sodium plus water -> sodium oxide
Perhaps its water, when water and sodium mix the water tends to dissolve the sodium
you get salt water which is called sodium hydroxide You get sodium hydroxide as stated above but NOT salt water as this is sodium chloride in water which has the formula NaCl and not NaOH.
Sodium is key in maintaining turgor within the plant stem. With high Na concentrations in the stem, osmotic pressure increases, and water flows into the stem to maintain concentration equilibrium.
nope
sodium corbonate
Sodium chloride (table salt). Adding this to the soil around a plant changes the osmotic potential of the soil around the plant (as well as the pH), preventing the plant from being able to absorb water (and nutrients) from the soil.
you can but it you do it will kill the plant...
Sodium doesn't dissolve in water, it reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide and hydrogen: sodium + water ----> sodium hydroxide + hydrogen
Sodium is not dissolved in water; sodium react with water.
sodium and water =sodium + water -> sodium hydroxide + hydrogen and this is the right answer because i got it of a scientist
Sodium chloride form with water saline solutions.
Salt draws water away from the roots, it also effects the way the plant gets its nutrients. In water, salt breaks down into sodium and chloride. The sodium replaces the nutrients in the soil, and the chloride, effects the photosynthasis in the leaves. These causes could effect the plant's growth by stunting it, it could make the plant turn brown and wilt, and last but not least, the plant could possibly die.
Sodium + Sulphate + Water = Sodium Sulphate + Water
Sodium plus water -> sodium oxide
Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; in water NaCl is dissolved and dissociated in ions.Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; sodium chloride is dissolved and dissociated in water.