you could work it out for yourself it is just the Valence electrons of the element. so potassiun would be K* *=a Lewis dot. it only has 1 dot because the valence electrons only have 1. == ==
salt
The smallest unit of salt that is still salt is a molecule. Salt is typically composed of one sodium ion (Na+) and one chloride ion (Cl-), which together form a neutral molecule of sodium chloride (NaCl). Each molecule of NaCl contains one atom of sodium and one atom of chlorine.
The chemical formula for table salt is NaCl.
In one molecule of common table salt (NaCl), there are two types of atoms: one sodium (Na) atom and one chlorine (Cl) atom. Each type of atom represents an element, so salt contains two elements: sodium and chlorine.
No single atom is the cation in ammonium chloride. The cation is polyatomic NH4+1.
Salt look like little cristals particles.
salt
No it is not.
One atom sodium and one atom chlorine in each salt molecule.
Salt is not an element, so there is no atom number.
No. Table Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) which has two atoms Sodium and Chlorine.
There are hundreds of salts. A metal atom forms an ionic bond to a non metal atom, this is called a salt. ZnF2, zinc fluoride is a salt. Table salt is NaCl, there is no zinc in it.
A molecule of salt, also known as sodium chloride (NaCl), consists of one sodium atom bonded to one chlorine atom. The atoms are arranged in a crystal lattice structure, with the sodium atom donating one electron to the chlorine atom to form a stable ionic bond. This results in a neutral molecule with a cubic shape, where the sodium and chlorine ions are arranged in a repeating pattern.
An element is a single atom type, like oxygen, hydrogen, carbon etc., but a compound is a molecule of several atom types, like water, salt, steel, etc.
clearish rhomboids.
A clear liquid. It is salt water.
A pile of 1.00g of salt is very small, equivalent to approximately 1/4 teaspoon or less. It would not be visible in the palm of your hand and would look like a tiny pinch of salt.