No, the bonds in sodium chloride are ionic.
Metallic bonds form only among metals, not with nonmetals.
No, that is 2 elements. One element would be Sodium (Na) and another would be Chlorine (Cl). Sodium Chloride would be a compound element.
Sodium chloride is compound, NaCl; sodium (Na) is a metallic chemical element and chlorine (Cl) is a gas.
Table salt is NaCl and thus the metallic element is sodium (Na). The Cl, chlorine, is non-metallic.
The formula for table salt is NaCl. This means that in this ionic compound, sodium ions and chlorine ions are bonded together in a one to one ratio. Sodium is the metallic element in this compound, whereas chloride is the nonmetal in the compound. Of course, sodium is only metallic in its elemental (not ionic) form.
Table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) contain sodium and chlorine. Sodium is the metal.
Chloride ions would form elements with ions of metallic elements. For example, with sodium ions, chloride ions form sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a compound, not a chemical element.
In chemistry, Na represents the chemical symbol for sodium. Sodium is a metallic element with atomic number 11 and is commonly found in table salt (sodium chloride) as well as many other compounds.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a compound, not a chemical element.
Sodium chloride is a salt and copper is an element.
No. Sodium chloride is quite different from either of its component elements.
Sodium chloride is a compound.