No. Sodium Chloride (NaCl), table salt, does not contain carbon and therefore cannot be an organic compound.
Sodium citrate is an organic compound. It is derived from citric acid, which is a naturally occurring organic acid found in citrus fruits.
Sodium ascorbate is an inorganic salt form of ascorbic acid, which is a naturally occurring organic compound known as vitamin C. While sodium ascorbate itself is not organic, it is derived from vitamin C, which is an organic substance.
Yes. The "benzo" portion of the name keys you into this being an organic compound. Organic compounds are carbon-containing compounds. In this case, sodium benzotriazolyl has at least one aromatic ring, definitely making it an organic compound.
Sodium phosphate is not considered organic, as it is a synthetic compound formed from the reaction of sodium hydroxide with phosphoric acid. Organic compounds, on the other hand, are those that contain carbon-hydrogen bonds and are derived from living organisms.
Sodium chloride is ionic and only dissolves in polar solvents- water is excellent. In non-polar organic solvents such as hydrocarbons it is insoluble but in polar organic solvents it has limited solubility, e.g. in methanol and tetrahydrofuran.
most compounds that has carbon can be considered organic but sodium flouride (NaF) does not contain carbon so it's not organic
No: Sodium dichromate contains no carbon and therefore can not be organic by the usual definitions.
Sodium citrate is an organic compound. It is derived from citric acid, which is a naturally occurring organic acid found in citrus fruits.
No, sodium is a chemical element.
Sodium ascorbate is an inorganic salt form of ascorbic acid, which is a naturally occurring organic compound known as vitamin C. While sodium ascorbate itself is not organic, it is derived from vitamin C, which is an organic substance.
Sodium chloride is a polar compound; organic solvents are nonpolar.
Sodium erythorbate is an organic compound.
Sodium is an element. Elements are considered to be inorganic
it contains sodium carbonate (inorganic), copper sulphate (inorganic) and sodium citrate (organic).
No. Sodium Chloride (NaCl), table salt, does not contain carbon and therefore cannot be an organic compound.
No. To be considered organic a compound must contain carbon. Sodium aluminum silicate contains sodium, aluminum, silicon, and oxygen, but not carbon.
Sodium chloride is an inorganic compound.