Both Sodium and Hydrogen have charges of plus one so no, alone they do not bond.
Hydrogen can have either a +1 or a -1 charge. Therefore you can have NaH, it is called Sodium Hydrazine.
Sodium, like all alkali metals, forms monovalent ionic bonds when reacting with nonmetals like oxygen and halogens.
One example to explain comes from a related question: [What type of bond is sodium chloride?]
Sodium is an alkali metal, and chlorine is a halogen. This means that sodium contains one electron in its outer orbital and chlorine contains seven electrons in its outer orbital. One electron moves from the sodium atom and attaches to the chlorine atom to fill its outer orbital. This is the creation of two ions (sodium Na+ and chloride Cl-) and the result is table salt.
A regular lattice of fixed positive nuclei surrounded by a sea of mobile, de-localised electrons.
The bond between sodium and sulfate is ionic; the bond in sulfate is covalent.
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond: sodium chloride from giant crystalline lattices.
it has a metallic bonding
Sodium itself is not flammable. But if it has an ionic bond or in other compounds it can be.
Covalent bond can exist in any type of compounds.
sodium and Chlorine. they are have a strong ionic bond.
Many compounds between nonmetals have this type of bond.
NaH (sodium hydride) is an ionic compound and forms an ionic bond.
Yes, all sodium compounds are ionic.
Sodium itself is not flammable. But if it has an ionic bond or in other compounds it can be.
sodium citrate bond
Ionic bond
The type of bond that exists in all organic compounds would be a covalent bond.
covalent bond
It is an ionic compound. The bond between sodium and Chlorine is an ionic bond.
yes
Metallic
IT has an 'ionic' bond.
An ionic bond
Sodium chloride has an ionic bond.