No. A compound does not retain the properties of its component elements.
Sodium and chlorine combine to form sodium chloride (common salt). Please see the links for information about the properties of these substances.
Anything that is not a noble gas will combine with chlorine.
The properties of sodium and chlorine change when the form NaCl. Both elements by themselves would kill you; sodium is highly reactive to water, and chlorine is a deadly gas. But when they combine, they form a compound that is necessary for human life.
They change their properties when they combine. Hydrogen and oxygen are gases but combine to form water, a liquid.
Chlorine and hydration
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No. They can have radically different properties from the elements they're formed from.Easy example: Sodium chloride. Sodium is a highly reactive nonmetal. Chlorine is a highly reactive nonmetal. They combine into a very nonreactive compound - table salt.
well it can produce many compounds , such when you combine chlorine and magnesium
Physical properties change when chemicals combine because when you mix chemicals the physical properties changes it identity.
Chlorine can combine with anything in the first column (ie. hydrogen, lithium, etc.) and it will become stable. This is according to the Octet rule.
Not always. For example sodium (Na), a metal that reacts violently with water, and chlorine (Cl), a yellow poisonous gas, combine to make table salt, which has none of these properties. But in others cases there are some similarities, like in a metal alloy.
Not always. For example sodium (Na), a metal that reacts violently with water, and chlorine (Cl), a yellow poisonous gas, combine to make table salt, which has none of these properties. But in others cases there are some similarities, like in a metal alloy.