Sodium chloride and water form a solution, a homogeneous mixture not a compound.
A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
Yes. When NaCl is added to water, it forms a solution, which is a homogeneous mixture.
No, ocean water is not a compound. It is a mixture of various elements and compounds, including water (H2O), salts, minerals, and organic matter.
Water is a compound
It is a compound. H2O
compound
It is not a mixture but a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. We call this compound water.
The compound HCl NaOH H2O is a mixture of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) in water (H2O). When mixed, HCl and NaOH neutralize each other to produce water and salt - in this case, sodium chloride (NaCl). So, technically, it is not a salt but a mixture that can produce salt under certain conditions.
Vegetable soup is a mixture, because a compound is a combination of 2 or more elements, like water, (H2O), or glucose, (C6H12O6). Soup is a mixture of different compounds, like salt, (NaCl), water, (H2O), and vegetables, which have a lot of everything. Those numbers are supposed to be smaller and near the bottom of the letters, but I don't know how to do that by typing.
Reactions are: 2Na + Cl2 = 2NaCl NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Yes because Sodium Chloride dissociates completely into the water as ions Any sample within the solution should measure the same amount of Na+ and Cl- and H2O