Sodium as an element is metal but as compounds with chlorine,florine,iodine etc they become salt compounds.
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl; the metal is sodium.
The silver-white metal used to make salt is sodium. Sodium is a highly reactive metal that is commonly found in salt compounds such as sodium chloride (table salt).
Na (Sodium) is combined with Cl (Chlorine) to make NaCl (table salt).
Sodium fluoride is a salt, not a base. It is composed of a positively charged sodium ion and a negatively charged fluoride ion, formed through an ionic bond between a metal (sodium) and a non-metal (fluorine).
I'm pretty sure combined they form table salt because sodium and chlorine make salt and they have similar properties and it said so in my textbook so yes I think it forms table salt. An acid + metal hydroxide => Salt and water Therefore Hydrochloric acid + Sodium hydroxide => Sodium Chloride + water
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl; the metal is sodium.
The silver-white metal used to make salt is sodium. Sodium is a highly reactive metal that is commonly found in salt compounds such as sodium chloride (table salt).
sea salt which is based on the metal sodium.
Table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine. Sodium is the metal.
Yes, of course it is. Salt contains Sodium and Sodium is one of the Alkali Metal and metal is magnetic.
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl.
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl; the metal is sodium (Na).
Na (Sodium) is combined with Cl (Chlorine) to make NaCl (table salt).
This metal is sodium (na); sodium chloride is NaCl.
It is a non metal. It is an ionic compound.
Common table salt is NaCl I think, hence the metal of the salt will be sodium (Na)
An example of a metal salt is sodium chloride, which is commonly known as table salt. It is composed of the metal sodium and the non-metal chlorine, creating an ionic compound that is often used in cooking and food preservation.