when sodium chloride dissolves in water, how many solute molecules result?
Ammonium chloride is a molecule.
Sodium Chloride is a molecule. A molecule contains 2 or more atoms. Each molecule of Sodium Chloride contains 1 sodium atom and 1 chloride atom.
No. Organic molecules contain carbon.
Chloride ions are not molecules, for a start. They are ions. And chlorine molecules are not organic. All organic compounds must have Carbon in them.
Pure hydrogen chloride is molecular. But Hydrochloric acid is hydrogen chloride dissolved in molecules. In this state it exists as ions rather than molecules.
NaCl will not dissolve in CCl4 is a polar molecule and polar molecule will only dissolve other polar molecules. As the same goes for non polar molecules.
Since there is no product, and only 1 reactant, it is not an equation, and thus, 4 molecules of sodium chloride
The potassium chloride formula unit (KCl) contain two atoms (K and Cl). Potassium chloride is an ionic compound and therefore does not have true molecules at all.
Since 35.5 is the approximate atomic mass of chlorine and each molecule contains two atoms of chlorine, the number of molecules is about half of Avogadro's Number, 3.01 X 1023.
A molecule of sodium chloride A molecule of sodium chloride
Because sodium chloride form giant lattices without a limit between molecules.
Solute molecules can be positively charged, negatively charged, or neutral. For example, dissolving sodium chloride in water produces positively charged sodium cations and negatively charged chloride anions. Dissolving sucrose (table sugar) in water produces only dissolved neutral sucrose molecules.