GOD
Yes, neither contain carbon.
Neither, Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is a salt (table salt) made by reacting the metal Sodium with the Gas Chlorine. The substance, Sodium Chloride, has both physical and chemical properties but is not a property itself.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Not quite right. Sodium chloride is formed from sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-)
Sodium chloride is a nonreactive solid at room temperature, and is commonly known as table salt. The two elements that make up sodium chloride are sodium and chlorine. Sodium is a very reactive metal that tastes bad. Pure sodium is explosive when it comes in contact with water. Chlorine is a nonreactive gas that is poisonous, and will kill you if you breathe enough of it. Sodium chloride retains neither the properties of sodium nor the properties of chlorine. This is because compounds (such as sodium chloride) have their own characteristics, and not the characteristics of its component elements.
Sodium chloride has a rare dihydrate, obtained from cold solutions - NaCl.2H2O.
The sodium chloride water solution is neutral.
Sodium chloride is a hygroscopic compound.
Sodium chloride is hygroscopic, absorb water.
efflorescent- washing soda, copper sulphate, glauber salt deliquescent -calcium chloride, sodium hydroxide, iron3 chloride
Sodium chloride is very hygroscopic.
Sodium chloride is hygroscopic, absorb water.
Deliquescent salts are salts that have a hygroscopic property, which means they pull moisture from the air or their surrounding environment. "Deliquescing" means they pull so much moisture from the air that they (the salts) dissolve in their own solution. Examples of such salts are Calcium Chloride, Potassium Carbonate and Sodium Hydroxide.
if by salt you mean Sodium Chloride (NaCl) Yes it is
Yes, sodium chloride is hygroscopic.
Sodium chloride hasn't hydrates but it is hygroscopic.
Sodium chloride is hygroscopic, absorb water.