sodium, and chlorine
Yes. A molecule consists of a number of atoms bonded together, NaCl is one atom of Sodium and one atom of Chlorine. However, a crystal of table salt will contain many molecules of NaCl.
No. Table Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) which has two atoms Sodium and Chlorine.
No, the chemical formula for table salt is NaCl, one atom of Sodium and one atom of Chlorine.
Table salt, NaCl is formed from Na and Cl.
A salt molecule has one sodium atom and one chlorine atom, NaCl.
"Common salt", with the chemical formula NaCl, does not contain any hydrogen. The much larger chemical class of "salts" includes some examples that do contain hydrogen, for example the ammonium salts.
NaCl is one atom of Na and one atom of Cl. Therefore, each molecule of NaCl has 2 atoms each, combined.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
Salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine.
No, salt is NaCl (Sodium and Chlorine)
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl; the formula unit contain sodium and chlorine.
Salt is an ionic compound formed by the action of an acid on a substance. Equal numbers of sodium and chlorine atoms combine to form salt. Each sodium atom loses an electron, becoming positively charge, and each chlorine atom gains an electron, becoming negatively charged. The equation for salt is: NaCl