Nothing at all. The sodium is fully oxidised in sodium chloride and chlorine gas has no effect.
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"... fully oxidised..." Really? There is no oxygen in the compound, which is simply NaCl.
chloride Chlorine. Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) my bobes
sodium and chlorine
When sodium and chlorine are mixed together, they form sodium chloride, which is more commonly known as table salt. Sodium loses an electron to chlorine, leading to the formation of an ionic bond between the two elements.
Sodium and chlorine mixed together forms sodium chloride, which is table salt. Sodium gives up an electron to chlorine, forming an ionic bond between the two elements.
Sodium and chlorine combine to form sodium chloride, which is table salt. When mixed together, sodium and chlorine ions form a stable compound that is safe for human consumption. Sodium chloride is essential for health and is not harmful unless consumed in excessive amounts.
Nothing
Table salt is created when they mix
Yes, there would be a chemical reaction if sodium astatine (NaAt) was mixed with chlorine water (sodium hypochlorite solution). The sodium from NaAt would react with the chlorine in the water to form sodium chloride (table salt) and astatine would likely form astatine chloride. This reaction would release heat and possibly some toxic gases.
The vapor pressure of water decreases when mixed with sodium chloride. This is because the presence of sodium chloride particles in the water lowers the vapor pressure of the solution compared to pure water at the same temperature.
Just by mixing there will be no reaction between any of these. However if suitable energy is supplied then sodium may combine with chlorine to form sodium chloride. Argon is chemically inert and does not react.
This is sodium chloride - NaCl.
When NaCl is placed in water, the sodium and chlorine dissociate, giving you ions of chlorine which are negatively charged, and sodium ions which are positively charged. There is no reaction when sodium chloride is placed in water.