Sodium chloride has an ionic bond, carbon tetrachloride has a covalent bond.
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.
Because carbon disulfide is a non-polar solvent sodium chloride is not soluble.
an electrovalent force
Sodium chloride has a polar molecule.
# Sodium Chloride (NaCl) # Calcium chloride (CaCl2) # Carbon Tetrachloride (CCl4) # Hydrochloric Acid (HCl)
an electrovalent force
Electrovalent or ionic bond
There is no such compound as sodium tetrachloride. Perhaps you meant to ask about sodium chloride, which is also known as table salt. Sodium chloride is a common ionic compound made up of sodium and chlorine ions.
Ammonium chloride > sodium chloride > sucrose Sucrose > sodium chloride > ammonium chloride Sodium chloride > ammonium chloride > sucrose The correct answer is option 1: Ammonium chloride > sodium chloride > sucrose.
There is no carbon in sodium chloride. Sodium chloride, what we call table salt, contains sodium and chlorine in a one-to-one ratio. These molecules have no carbon in them at all.
Sodium chloride is a compound.
Carbon tetrachloride (tetra-chloromethane, CCl4) is a NON-ionic fluid at room temperature, it is noncunducting fluid. NaCl is an ionic salt and will conduct electricity only when in molten state: then freely movable cations and anions are available.