NaCl is a molecule composed of two atoms Na and Cl.
Not only NaOH, can be any other compound that do not have any water molecule attached to it such as anhydrous CaCl2, Silica gel, anhydrous NaCl..
Compound
A diatomic molecule of a solid compound consists of two atoms of the same element that are covalently bonded together within the solid lattice structure. Examples include oxygen (O2) and nitrogen (N2) in solid form.
CO. NaCl is not a molecular compound, because it is ionically bonded.
Table salt, or NaCl, does not form molecules - rather, it is a collection of Na+ and Cl- ions in a 1:1 ratio, hence the name "ionic compound". Water, or H2O, is a molecule. It consists of two hydrogen atoms covalently bonded to a central oxygen atom.
No Its an ionic compound
compound. the molecule is NaCl.
Sodium chloride is a compound forming large lattices.
The term molecule is not adequate for sodium chloride because NaCl form large lattices. More exact is formula unit - NaCl.
Yes, sodium chloride is an inorganic compound.
NaCl is an ionic compound composed of sodium (Na+) and chloride (Cl-) ions held together by electrostatic forces. It is not a molecule because it does not consist of covalently bonded atoms.
1. CH is an organic radical. 2. NaCl is an inorganic compound.
Sodium chloride is an ionic compound; the term "molecule" is not adequate because NaCl form large lattices.
Sodium chloride is an example of a common table salt.
It would be inaccurate to speak of an NaCl molecule because NaCl is an ionic compound, not a molecule. NaCl is formed from an ionic bond between sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-), not from the sharing of electrons between atoms like in a covalent molecule.
Salt (NaCl) is an inorganic compound.
NaCl is a Sodium Chloride molecule,and is a Polar Bond.