When combined, they create sodium chloride (table salt).
Table salt (NaCl; sodium chloride).
The suffix "-ide" is commonly used in chemical compound names to indicate that the compound is made from two elements. For example, sodium chloride is made up of sodium and chlorine atoms, and the suffix "-ide" is added to the end of chlorine to show this.
Sodium will react with chlorine to give you sodium chloride. Sodium will burn out. That means it is exothermic reaction. The argon is noble gas. argon will not take part in the chemical reaction or in the process of burning. Argon will act as a medium to dilute the chlorine. The end products will be same. The time to complete the burning will be little more, when chlorine is diluted with argon gas. This is just like carbon burning in the air and in pure oxygen. Carbon burns brighter in pure oxygen.
Sodium would lose one electron and chlorine would gain one electron. End of contest. Sodim is oxidised, chlorine is reduced.
Main end product is chloroamine. It is a toxic vapour
Sodium would lose one electron and chlorine would gain one electron. End of contest. Sodim is oxidised, chlorine is reduced.
First of all, it does not have PURE sodium and PURE chlorine. They have been chemically changed to make a different substance all together, which is PURE Sodium Chloride. And the end result of a chemical reaction may be completely unrelated with the elements used to make it. Take water for example, it's made from Hydrogen and Oxygen, both very flammable gases, but if you combine them, it forms water, which is hard to burn (not impossible).
when sodium and chlorine come together to create salt they have a strong attraction between them, due to that sodium is a cation and chlorine is a anion. so they just end up sticking to each other. kind of like a magnet (+-)attract, (++)(--)repel
Ionic. The sodium donates and electron to the chlorine so they both end up with outer shells that are full.
Nope, I think you are referring to chlorate, the polyatomic ion (ClO3). The -ide at the end of chloride is the suffix you use when naming an ionic compund. For example: ----> Chlorine (1-) + Sodium (1+) = Sodium Chloride (NaCl) and not Sodium Chlorine.
Oh, dude, 2NaCl has a total of 12 atoms. Each NaCl molecule consists of one sodium atom (Na) and one chlorine atom (Cl), so when you have 2NaCl, you've got 2 sodium atoms and 2 chlorine atoms. That's like, basic chemistry, man.
Sodium chloride got its name because it's chemical formula is NaCl; 1 sodium atom and one chlorine atom. When a chlorine atom is part of an ionic compound, it's end is changed from -ine to -ide.