Compound.
Borax is a compound composed of elements such as boron, sodium, and oxygen. It is neither an element nor a mixture.
Borax is a compound composed of boron, sodium, and oxygen atoms in a specific chemical structure. It is not a heterogeneous mixture because it has a definite composition with fixed ratios of its constituent elements.
When borax is dissolved in water, it creates a homogeneous mixture known as a solution. This means that the borax molecules are evenly distributed throughout the water, forming a single phase.
The chemical symbol for the compound borax is Na2B4O7·10H2O.
Yes, borax crystals are an ionic compound. Borax is made up of ions composed of boron, sodium, and oxygen atoms that are held together by ionic bonds.
Borax is a compound composed of elements such as boron, sodium, and oxygen. It is neither an element nor a mixture.
Borax is a compound composed of boron, sodium, and oxygen atoms in a specific chemical structure. It is not a heterogeneous mixture because it has a definite composition with fixed ratios of its constituent elements.
When borax is dissolved in water, it creates a homogeneous mixture known as a solution. This means that the borax molecules are evenly distributed throughout the water, forming a single phase.
No. Magnesium sulphate is a compound containing magnesium, sulfur and oxygen, with the formula MgSO4. Borax is a compound containing Boron. Borax is generally described as Na2B4O7·10H2O
The chemical symbol for the compound borax is Na2B4O7·10H2O.
Yes, borax crystals are an ionic compound. Borax is made up of ions composed of boron, sodium, and oxygen atoms that are held together by ionic bonds.
No, borax is not monatomic. It is a compound made up of boron, oxygen, and sodium ions.
Borax is a sodium compound and therefore ionic.
Water is a compound
No, borax is not an element. It is composed of elements. Specifically, sodium borate.
Borax does not dissolve in oils as it is a water-soluble compound. Mixing borax with oils will result in the borax staying as solid particles separate from the oil phase.
The sodium tetraborate water system is a mixture of sodium tetraborate (borax) and water, where the borax is not chemically bonded to the water. In contrast, a compound is a substance formed by the chemical bonding of two or more elements in fixed proportions. Distinguishing between the two can be done by observing that in the sodium tetraborate water system, borax particles are physically mixed with water molecules, while in a compound, the elements are chemically bonded in a specific ratio.