Sodium Nitrate
NaNO3
No it is ionic because when a metal (sodium) and a non-metal (nitrogen) combine it makes an ionic compound. If you combined two non-metals it would create a molecular compound.
Sodium and nitrogen
When an organic compound is heated strongly with sodium, any halogens, nitrogen, and sulfur will be converted into inorganic sodium salts such as sodium halide (for halides), sodium cyanide(for nitrogen), sodium sulfide (for sulfur), and sodium thiocyanate (for sulfur and nitrogen).The nitrogen is confirmed with ferrous sulfate i.e. iron sulfate.
They form Sodium Bromide
Elements of Sodium nitrate(NaNO3): Sodium = 1 atom Nitrogen = 1 atom Oxygen = 3 atoms
No it is ionic because when a metal (sodium) and a non-metal (nitrogen) combine it makes an ionic compound. If you combined two non-metals it would create a molecular compound.
Sodium and nitrogen
Sodium and phosphorus form sodium phosphide when they combine. The chemical formula for sodium phosphide is Na3P.
The percent of nitrogen in sodium nitrate is 16,47 %.
When an organic compound is heated strongly with sodium, any halogens, nitrogen, and sulfur will be converted into inorganic sodium salts such as sodium halide (for halides), sodium cyanide(for nitrogen), sodium sulfide (for sulfur), and sodium thiocyanate (for sulfur and nitrogen).The nitrogen is confirmed with ferrous sulfate i.e. iron sulfate.
Sodium and Nitrogen
The symbol for nitrogen is N. The symbol for sodium is Na (from the Latin word "natrium").
They form Sodium Bromide
NaF, sodium fluoride
Elements of Sodium nitrate(NaNO3): Sodium = 1 atom Nitrogen = 1 atom Oxygen = 3 atoms
combine Tim and Jacob
why Na does not react with nitrogen