Yes because Sodium Chloride dissociates completely into the water as ions
Any sample within the solution should measure the same amount of Na+ and Cl- and H2O
Sodium chloride (table salt) is a compound - NaCl.
AgNO3(aq) + NaCl(aq) --> AgCl(s) + NaNO3(aq)
If you mean pure substances then:HCl(aq) and NaCl(aq) are not pure substances but solutions. The (aq) means the substance is dissolved in water.HCl(g) and NaCl(s) is are pure substances
Salt mixed with water will form aqueus sodium chloride, NaCl (aq). The chemical formula for this is NaCl.H2o
No it is not homogenous
It's a homogenous.
It is a homogenous mixture
homogenous mixture
No, an element is not a mixture.
depends if its homogenous or not
an "aqueous solution".If a chemical formular is written it would be expressed as....NaCl(s) + H2O(l) ---> Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq)The stuff in brackets is also subscripted.
Homogenous