The taste of sodium chloride is considered an emergent property.
Sodium chloride is a chemical compound (NaCl), not a property.
Sodium chloride is an ionic, polar compound.
Emergent properties are new properties that arise with each step upward in the hierarchy of life, owing to the arrangement and interactions of parts as complexity increases. The physical, chemical, and biological properties of salt are the emergent properties. Sodium is a metal and Chlorine is a poisonous gas, but when mixed together they form Sodium chloride, which has a crystal structure. This physical property is an example of how table salt is an emergent property. Table salt is said to have emergent properties because the compound has different characteristics from those of its elements. It is composed of Sodium which is a metal and Chlorine a poisonous gas but when chemically combined together they form an edible substance.
The melting point of NaCl is very different from the melting points of Na or Cl.
Neither, Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is a salt (table salt) made by reacting the metal Sodium with the Gas Chlorine. The substance, Sodium Chloride, has both physical and chemical properties but is not a property itself.
Sublimation is one.
Yes, it is considered an emergent property
Yes, it is an intensive property.
It's sodium chloride if you're talking about the compound NaCl. And no, the property of the compound will not be the same as the property of either of the elements.
The answer is an emergent property. Emergent
water
Well...sodium means salt and ammonium means a type of in door cleaning acid.the difference is the salt and ammonium