By adding the molecular weights and dividing by 1 you have the formula for Eq for salts that use only 1 chloride.
Only some salts are chlorides; but salts are also nitrates, chlorates, acetates, benzoates, phosphates, sulfates etc.
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
There is only one chloride ion in the formula unit of sodium chloride.
"Fresh" water contains all types of salts including sodium chloride, and calcium chloride. Only distilled water contains no salts, it is pure H2O
Why HCL forms only one series of salts?
The concentrations of salts in waters are very variable and also the salt types; each water has a specific composition. For example sea/ocean water have approx. 35 g/L sodium chloride and treated tap water practically doesn't contain salts.
The formula for magnesium chloride is MgCl2 Note that the II in the written name is not necessary because magnesium only forms the 2+ ion.
This is only sodium chloride (NaCl). Flor de sal, fleur de sel, king of salts, queen of salts, Himalayan salt and many other are brands of table salt - nothing special or serious, only advertisment for naives.
No, table salt has a formula of NaCl . I think (but not sure) that the only way of getting table salt through neutralization is when sodium hydroxide reacts with hydrogen chloride: NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O
The only pure salt that has any sodium chloride {note correct spelling} in it is the salt sodium chloride itself. Many mixtures of salts could contain sodium chloride in the mixture.
The correct formula for lithium chloride is LiCl. The subscript "2" is not needed because lithium only forms one positive charge and chloride only forms one negative charge.
A binary salt contain only two chemical elements; for example sodium chloride, NaCl. Radical salt is very probable an incorrect term.