Table salt is an ionic compound, sodium chloride consisting of equal numbers of Na+ cations and Cl- anions. In the ionic lattice each sodium has 6 chloride ions around it and each chloride has six sodium ions around it. See link for a picture.
Table salt is a salt formed when Na (Sodium) ion and Cl (Chlorine) ion combine to form NaCl (Sodium Chloride).
i.e., Na+1 + Cl-1 --> NaCl (Table salt)
Although Table Salt may have other impurities too like NaI ( Sodium Iodide)
NaCl, Sodium chloride.
No
NaCl
The periodic table can be used to describe atomic structure by using the period to tell you how many shells (principle quantum number) there are in an element, and the group number can be used to tell you the number of valence electrons in the outermost shell.
I know little about the preodic table, but in the periodic table, carbon is the element. It also exists as diamond, in a different atomic structure.
The different elements are arranged in the increasing order of their atomic number and repeating chemical / physical properties.
Go to ptable.com it shows all that stuff
Atomic numbers are only assigned to elements, so only things on the periodic table. Saltwater is a mixture
Table salt, or sodium chloride: NaCl
Table salt has a cube structure and table sugar has a hexagonal crystaline structure.
Yes
Single molecular
The number of protons in the nucleus is equal to an elements atomic number, which determines that element's position in the periodic table.
The structure, chemical formula unit and properties are the same.
It is an ionic compound - arranged in a giant lattice structure.
check this perodic table at www.calculatoredge.com
sodium chloride is a salt, a type of compound, not an element. it has no atomic number.
The periodic table?
Table salt is Sodium Chloride: NaCl A "salt" is a combination of ions to form a stable, uncharged compound. So technically, Potassium Chloride (KCl) is also a salt. There are many others.
The atomic number is equal to the number of protons and the number of neutrons in that atom.