It is very normal that different compounds or elements have different properties. Each is a specific entity.
Yes, the properties of compounds are different from those of their component elements. For example, sodium metal and chlorine gas react to form the solid salt sodium chloride.
Well there are two elements in table salt. The formula for common table salt is NaCl, which is sodium chloride. The two elements are sodium and chlorine.Table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
Examples: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, sodium nitrate, calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate etc.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
sodium chloride. I think................ Actually, I think it's sodium and chlorine. ~Geng Leong
sodium chloride as a compound has different physical and chemical properties than sodium and chloride not mixed together
No. Sodium chloride is quite different from either of its component elements.
Sodium and chlorine are the only elements in sodium chloride.
Because sodium and sodium chloride are two different things. Even though sodium is in sodium chloride when you mix two elements you create a new compound.
Sodium is a solid substance and chlorine is gas when they form sodium chloride it is different compound and it is common salt and it is solid.
Sodium chloride contain sodium and chlorine.
Sodium and chlorine combine to make the most common salt, sodium chloride. It should be noted though, that many different elements can combine to make many different salts.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
There are two elements that make up sodium chloride. They are sodium and chlorine.
Sodium chloride is table salt - you will get sick if you eat too much. When elements combine to make compounds they have different properties to the elements that made them.
Sodium chloride is a compound and hasn't valence; sodium and chlorine, as elements are monovalent,
sodium and chlorine