Sodium chloride has a 1 to 1 ratio of its constituent atoms, sodium and chlorine. Sodium chloride, table salt, is a two-atom molecule. One atom of sodium is bonded to one atom of chlorine. The two atoms have combine to make a molecule of salt in a one-to-one ratio.
Atomic ratio Na/Cl in the formula unit: 1
Percentage of sodium: 39,665 %
Percentage of chlorine: 60,334 %
Sodium Chloride is made up of Na+ and Cl- . They are in 1:1 ratio
One atom of sodium in each formula unit of sodium chloride.
Your question is confuse.
60,33417 % chlorine and 39,66583 % sodium
The atomic ratio between sodium and chlorine in sodium chloride is 1:1, as indicated by its formula NaCl. If the mass ratio is wanted, it is that of the atomic weights of the two elements.
In sodium chloride, the ratio is 1/1.
The ratio mass of chlorine/mass of sodium is 1,5.
Lite salt is a mixture 1:1 of sodium and potassium chloride.This is a mixture sodium chloride/potassium chloride in the ratio 1:1.
There is no carbon in sodium chloride. Sodium chloride, what we call table salt, contains sodium and chlorine in a one-to-one ratio. These molecules have no carbon in them at all.
Sodium Chloride is a compound made up of Na+ and Cl- ions in a lattice arrangement in a 1:1 ratio
23 g of sodium to 35.5 g Chlorine
The components of sodium chloride (sodium and chlorine) are chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio and definite structure. A mixture does not have these traits.
1:1
The chemical formula of table salt (sodium chloride) is NaCl; the ratio is 1.
The molar mass of sodium chloride is 58,44 g. The molar mass of sodium bicarbonate is 84,007 g. The ratio is 1,437.