This is not for sodium myristate but the website is useful. http://www.elmhurst.edu/~chm/vchembook/554soap.html
A mixture has not a chemical formula or equation.
No, NaCl H2O is not a chemical equation. An equation must have an equal sign. And even if you put an equal sign into those terms, it is not true that NaCl = H2O, so that would be a false equation, not a complete and balanced equation. You are not even close to having that.
NaCl------------>Na+ + Cl-
The chemical equation is:Na2CO3 + 2 HCl = 2 NaCl + CO2 + H2O
Here is the balanced equation! TiCl4 + 2H2O --> TiO2 + 4HCl
Writing a chemical reaction with symbols: Ex.: NaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl (s) + NaNO3 A mathematical (digital) system for the writing of chemical equations exist but it is rarely used.
NaCl doesn't burn.
Sodium chloride is a compound; a compound has a chemical formula (or a formula unit) not a chemical equation. The formula unit of sodium chloride is NaCl.
NaCl is sodium chloride or salt.
An example of a balanced chemical equation is: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Nacl
No, NaCl H2O is not a chemical equation. An equation must have an equal sign. And even if you put an equal sign into those terms, it is not true that NaCl = H2O, so that would be a false equation, not a complete and balanced equation. You are not even close to having that.
Soap is a mixture and not a compound. It therefore does not have a chemical formula.
The formula unit of sodium chloride is NaCl.
The chemical formula (more correct is formula unit) of sodium chloride is NaCl.
Assuming there is only salt left, NaCl.
For example a neutralization reaction:HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
TiOCl2 + NaOH - TiO2 + NaCl + HCl