This depends on your experiment.
It can be either, depending on the reaction. Sodium chloride is a product of the reaction of sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid. Sodium chloride is a reactant in the ion exchange reaction in a water softener to remove calcium from hard water.
I'm not sure I understand the question, but if you're asking what you get when you react elemental sodium (a reactive, caustic metal) and elemental chlorine (a reactive, poisonous, greenish-yellow halogen gas), the answer is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; after dissolution NaCl is dissociated in Na+ and Cl-.
To determine the limiting reactant, calculate the moles of each reactant using their molar masses. Then, use the stoichiometry of the reaction to determine which reactant will be consumed first. Whichever reactant produces the lesser amount of product will be the limiting reactant.
Manganese chloride may be a reactant.
The molar mass of sodium chloride is 58.44 g/mol. To find the mass of sodium chloride formed, you need to compare the moles of sodium and chlorine to determine the limiting reactant. Calculate moles of sodium and chlorine, determine limiting reactant, and use stoichiometry to find mass of sodium chloride formed.
When solid sodium chloride dissolves in water, the resulting sodium and chloride ions are said to be the products. Product is a general term for any substance which results as the result of a chemical reaction. Thus, if the solution was to be boiled and the ions formed into a solid, the products and reactants would be reversed.
A chemical reaction occurs between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride. Adding more sodium hydroxide to the reaction causes it to speed up. If you add more of a reactant, such as sodium hydroxide, can it be considered a catalyst? Why or why not?
It is not a chemical reaction, it is only a dissociation reaction:NaCl-------------------------Na+ + Cl-
The limiting reagent is the reactant that is completely consumed first in a chemical reaction. To determine the limiting reagent in the reaction between sodium hydroxide and copper chloride, you would need to compare the moles of each reactant present and see which one is in excess and which one is limiting.
Sodium chloride has two atoms in the formula unit (NaCl): sodium and chlorine.
Sodium chloride is a compound.