They are very close to each other, they both dissociate completely in solution, as they both contain the sodium cation.
36g of NaCl can dissolve in 100g of H_2_0
and
50.4g of NaCH_3_COO can dissolve in 100g of H_2_O
So Sodium acetate is slightly more soluable because it also forms a weak acid with the acetate ion, creating a buffer solution, where as sodium and chlorine do not.
Examples: NaCl, NaBr, NaI, NaF, NaNO3, Na2SO4, CH3COONa, Na2CO3, Na2S etc.
The chemical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl; in water solution, after dissociation, the ions Na+ and Cl- exist.
No visible reaction. It stays clear. No Odor either.
Corrected:NaCl + AgNO3 --> AgCl + NaNO3
NaCl-----------------Na+ + Cl-is a dissociation reaction.
The equation is: NaCl----------Na++ Cl-
Dissociation of sodium chloride in water solution: NaCl -----------Na+ + Cl-
Buffers are made out of what are called weak acids or weak bases. Mixtures of CH3COOH and CH3COONa can act as buffers because they don't break apart completely in solution like HCl and NaCl. As the CH3COOH and CH3COONa are in solution they keep the pH constant by either donating or accepting protons because they don't act like strong acids or bases. HCl is known as a strong acid where the hydrogen disassociates completely from the chloride. NaCl is not a buffer because it dissolves completely as welll
BC
Dissociation of what? Table salt, for example (NaCl) dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions in water.
CH3COONa + NaCl --------2 Na+ + Cl- + (CH3COO)-
NaCl------------>Na+ + Cl-
Dissociation of sodium chloride in water solution: NaCl -----------Na+ + Cl-
NaCl-----------------Na+ + Cl-is a dissociation reaction.
Examples: NaCl, NaBr, NaI, NaF, NaNO3, Na2SO4, CH3COONa, Na2CO3, Na2S etc.
The dissociation reaction is: NaCl------------------Na+ + Cl-
Dissociation products of sodium chloride are the cation Na+ and the anion Cl-.