Yes, ions of sodium (+) and chloride (-) in solution.
no
Both are sodium chloride (NaCl) !
Yes. Sodium chloride is a polar molecule.Take that last answer with a grain of .... If you are trying to decide whether or not the bond is ionic or polar covalent, I would choose ionic. The two atoms have very different electronegativities; the chlorine takes the electron from sodium, becoming Cl-, and leaving the sodium Na+.
Chloride is the ionized form of chlorine.
There is NO real chemical reaction when NaCl dissolves, it is only ionized (split into ions):NaCls + [H2Oliq] --> Na+aq + Cl-aq + [H2Oliq]
An electrolyte disorder is an imbalance of certain ionized salts (i.e., bicarbonate, calcium, chloride, magnesium, phosphate, potassium, and sodium) in the blood
Sodium chloride has two atoms in the formula unit (NaCl): sodium and chlorine.
Sodium chloride is a compound.
Sodium chloride is not a cause of cancer.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Sodium chloride is formed from sodium and chlorine.
sodium chloride