Glucose is not made from sodium chloride.
no
Glucose
The chemical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl. The chemical formula of glucose is C6H12O6.
Sodium chloride forms a crystalline lattice structure that is held together by strong ionic bonds between sodium and chloride ions, making it a harder substance. In contrast, glucose is a molecular solid with weaker intermolecular forces between individual glucose molecules. These weaker forces result in a lower hardness for glucose compared to sodium chloride.
Water, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, and glucose can be organized from lower to higher levels as follows: molecules (water, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, glucose); cells (e.g., glucose in cells); tissues (e.g., glucose in muscle tissue); organs (e.g., glucose in the liver); organ systems (e.g., glucose in the circulatory system); and organisms (e.g., glucose in a human).
No, salt and glucose are not considered electrolytes. Electrolytes are substances that dissociate into ions when dissolved in water, allowing them to conduct electricity. Common electrolytes include sodium, potassium, and chloride ions. Salt, or sodium chloride, does contain electrolytes, but glucose does not.
Glucose (Melting point: 146° C) will melt faster than NaCl (Melting point: 801° C)
Glucose and sodium chloride behave differently osmotically because each formula unit of glucose behaves as a single osmotically active unit, but each formula unit of sodium chloride behaves as two osmotically active units: Each formula unit dissociates in solution into two ions, and the two ions act as osmotically independent units.
Yes NaCl can conduct the electricity........but i am not sure about Glucose
glucose has less solubility than sodium chloride because of the more OH bonds
This is an isotonic saline solution; 9 g/L sodium chloride solution in water with added glucose.