The water solution of sodium chloride is neutral; the solid NaCl is neutral.
After dissociation are formed the cation Na+ and the anion Cl-.
The charge of Na is +1 and the charge of Cl is -1.
*the attractive force between opposite electrical charges
These are the ions and their charges: Na+1 Cl-1The charges have to add up to zero, so one +1 sodium ion cancels out one -1 chlorine ion. Therefore, the chemical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl.
This ion is sodium, Na+.
Yes.
Na is positive ion,Cl is negative ion
An ion pair is made up of a positively charged ion (cation) and a negatively charged ion (anion) that are attracted to each other due to their opposite charges. For example, in the ionic compound sodium chloride (NaCl), the ion pair consists of the sodium cation (Na+) and chloride anion (Cl-). The correct formula for the compound they form is NaCl.
A sodium ion. Cation. Na+ A chlorine ion. Anion Cl- Forms NaCl, sodium chloride.
NaCl is the chemical formula for sodium chloride, often known as "table salt". "Na+" is the formula for a sodium ion; "Cl-" is the formula for a chloride ion. The charges balance to give a ratio of 1 sodium ion : 1 chloride ion per molecule of NaCl.
Each (notional) unit NaCl would yield a single sodium ion Na+ and a single chloride ion Cl-. The rub is that it's not quite this simple because sodium chloride in solid form is an extended matrix of NaCl units. There's a diagram on its wikipedia page.
Yes it is. Na is positive ion and Cl is negative ion.
No, NaCl, or table salt, is an ion compound of sodium and chlorine.