Sodium fluoride.
Lithium. Practically every metal combined with fluorine will give you an ionic compound. Some transition metals have volatile penta and hexafluorides and these are bonded with polar covalent bonds.
It is an ionic bond. Two sodium atoms give up their single valence electrons to two fluorine atoms. This causes the sodium atom to become positively charged and the fluorine atoms to become negatively charged. The ionic bond is formed by the electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged ions. 2Na + F2 --> Na+ + 2F- --> 2[Na]+[F]-
An ionic compound, lithium fluoride.
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Salt (sodium chloride) - A compound formed by the combination of sodium and chlorine ions. Water (H2O) - A compound composed of hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Carbon dioxide (CO2) - A compound made up of carbon and oxygen atoms. Sugar (sucrose) - A compound consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen molecules. Methane (CH4) - A compound composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
Sodium (Na) would form an ionic bond with fluorine (F) to create sodium fluoride (NaF). Sodium donates an electron to fluorine to achieve a stable electron configuration, resulting in the formation of an ionic bond between the two elements.
Lithium. Practically every metal combined with fluorine will give you an ionic compound. Some transition metals have volatile penta and hexafluorides and these are bonded with polar covalent bonds.
It is an ionic bond. Two sodium atoms give up their single valence electrons to two fluorine atoms. This causes the sodium atom to become positively charged and the fluorine atoms to become negatively charged. The ionic bond is formed by the electrostatic attraction between the oppositely charged ions. 2Na + F2 --> Na+ + 2F- --> 2[Na]+[F]-
Sodium chloride is a polar compound as water.
Bright yellow :: This is the sodium ions. Any sodium compound will give a flame test colour of yellow/
An ionic compound, lithium fluoride.
No. There is no carbon in either sodium sulphate or hydrochloric acid so they cannot produce a compound containing carbon.
Because in a Belstein test, the copper halide should be able to volatilize to produce green flame, an indication that a halogen is present in the compound. Copper fluoride is not volatile., hence this kind of test is not suitable for the detection of fluorine.
Salinity (or 'saltiness') is due to the compound sodium chloride, written NaCl, and adding more of this will increase the salinity. However never add metallic sodium to water, it produces a violent and dangerous reaction. So when you say 'adding sodium to chloride' I'm not sure what you mean. The compound sodium chloride is just cooking salt and quite harmless and you can add as much of that as you like, but sodium as an element is a different matter.
A chemical compound is a substance composed of two or more different elements chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio. The elements in a compound are held together by chemical bonds that give the compound its unique properties. Examples of compounds include water (H2O) and sodium chloride (NaCl).
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Salt (sodium chloride) - A compound formed by the combination of sodium and chlorine ions. Water (H2O) - A compound composed of hydrogen and oxygen atoms. Carbon dioxide (CO2) - A compound made up of carbon and oxygen atoms. Sugar (sucrose) - A compound consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen molecules. Methane (CH4) - A compound composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms.