The reactants in this hypothetical reaction are sodium and chlorine. See the related question for details on a better way to make sodium chloride in practice.
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants; sodium chloride is the product.
The element sodium is a soft silvery-white metal that is highly reactive. The element chlorine is a yellowish-green colored, toxic gas. Sodium chloride is a white crystalline solid that is useful in seasoning and preserving food. It is also the most common salt in the ocean and in the tissue fluids of living things.
No, salt water is sodium chloride dissolved in water. Sodium is a soft, silvery, and dangerously reactive metal.
Was: it is silvery white Now: It's a colorless gas at normal temperatures. It forms Hydrochloric Acid on contact with water or atmospheric moisture.
No. At standard temperature, sodium is a highly reactive, silvery-gray metal that is soft enough to be cut with a knife. At standard temperature, chlorine is a dangerous and poisonous yellowish-green gas which exists as Cl2.
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants; sodium chloride is the product.
The reactants in this hypothetical reaction are sodium and chlorine. See the related question for details on a better way to make sodium chloride in practice.
barium carbonate is a white crystals that it is an insoluble salts.
silvery white
The element sodium is a soft silvery-white metal that is highly reactive. The element chlorine is a yellowish-green colored, toxic gas. Sodium chloride is a white crystalline solid that is useful in seasoning and preserving food. It is also the most common salt in the ocean and in the tissue fluids of living things.
It's a pale yellow solid.
sodium is a vomit colour with bits of grass mixed through
No, salt water is sodium chloride dissolved in water. Sodium is a soft, silvery, and dangerously reactive metal.
yes or more commonly known as salt. they bond together because atoms with their outmost electron shell almost filled will want to get it totally filled and an atom with only one or two electrons in their outermost shell will want to rid of them so their outermost shell is filled. Chlorine has the atomic number of 17. 2 electrons in the first shell, 8 in the second and 7 in the third. the third can hold up to 18 electrons. sodium has the atomic number of 11. 11 electrons. 2 in the first level, 8 in the second and 1 in the third. sodium will give one electron to chlorine giving sodium a positive charge and chlorine a negative charge. The opposite charges attract making a compound. the compound sodium chloride.
Was: it is silvery white Now: It's a colorless gas at normal temperatures. It forms Hydrochloric Acid on contact with water or atmospheric moisture.
No, they are not the same thing. Elemental sodium (Na) is a soft silvery metal that violently burns up when water touches it. Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is the scientific name for table salt - the same stuff you put on food.
No. At standard temperature, sodium is a highly reactive, silvery-gray metal that is soft enough to be cut with a knife. At standard temperature, chlorine is a dangerous and poisonous yellowish-green gas which exists as Cl2.