Sodium Fluoride is an Ionic Compound. It's Fluorine and Sodium with the formula NaF.
Sodium fluoride is a compound. It comprises of two elements- sodium and fluorine combined in a fixed ratio.
It is a pure compound, not a mixture at all.
No such substance as 'sodium chlorine'. I think you mean 'sodium chloride'. I which case it is an ionic compound. Separately , sodium(metal) is an element and chlorine(gas) is an element. They both appear in the Periodic Table. 'Mixture', does not come into question.
A sodium carbonate solution, or any solution for that matter, is a mixture.
Sodium Fluoride Sodium fluoride, but if you add oxygen, it becomes Sodium Fluorate.
No. Sodium (Na) is a chemical element. Salt is a term we generally apply to table salt, which is sodium chloride (NaCl), a chemical compound formed of one atom of sodium and one atom of chlorine. Also note that a salt is also a general term that can be applied to a compound formed of a Group 1 or Group 2 element, an alkali metal or an alkali earth metal (respectively), and a group 17 element, a halogen. There is a nice periodic table posted by our friends at Wikipedia, and all the elements are posted by chemical symbol (naturally). Each chemical symbol is a link to the Wikipedia article on that element, so you can surf directly to an element from the periodic table. A link to this periodic table is provided.
compound
compound
Sodium is an element.
Fluoride is an ion of the element fluorine. So it is not a compound. However sometimes the compound sodium fluoride, a common ingredient in toothpaste, is simply referred to a fluoride.
Sodium chloride is a compound.
Sodium chloride is a compound.
Sodium Chloride is a compound.
Sodium chloride is a compound.
It is a compound mixture of both.
Compound.
Compound
Compound