Na3PO4 is the anhydrous form - and is the official sodium phosphate. However many chemists use the term to decribe a range of compounds. See the wikipedia article
Common salt (Sodium Chloride) has the formula NaCl.
Here are five examples of chemical formulas: NaCl Sodium Chloride H2O Water CO2 Carbon Dioxide NH3 Ammonia CO Carbon Monoxide
Not every chemical formula requires subscript. For example table salt is NaCl, sodium chloride. No subscript. But most chemical formulae do require subscript, such as water, H2O.
The chemical symbol of sodium is Na (from the Latin natrium the word for salt).
Sodium and bromine are chemical elements, not properties; the chemical reaction between sodium and bromine is a chemical process, not a property.
The chemical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl.
Na2. Co3
SnF2 and NaF
A chemical reaction will occur, resulting in the formation of insoluble calcium phosphate (a white solid) and sodium nitrate dissolved in the solution. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the ions switch partners.
The chemical symbol for sodium thiosulphate (hypo) is Na2S2O3•5H2O.
Common salt (Sodium Chloride) has the formula NaCl.
Sodium: Na Potassium: K ...seriously?
Al2(HPO4)3 Aluminum has ionic charge of +3 and monohydrogen phosphate has -2 because phophate has valance of -3 and has -2 when it was as monohydrogen phophate
Sodium chloride is dissociated in water: NaCl--------------------------Na+ + Cl-
Chemical symbols - Na is Sodium and Cl is Chlorine
NaCl is the chemical formula for sodium chloride, also known as table salt. NaOH is the chemical formula for sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base commonly used in cleaning products.
Here are five examples of chemical formulas: NaCl Sodium Chloride H2O Water CO2 Carbon Dioxide NH3 Ammonia CO Carbon Monoxide