Table salt is NaCl. Read as Sodium Chloride
The formula for salts can vary depending on the specific salt. In general, salts are composed of positively charged ions (cations) and negatively charged ions (anions) held together by ionic bonds. The formula for a salt is typically written as the cation first followed by the anion, such as NaCl for common table salt.
They are ionic salts.
They are different compounds: table salt is sodium chloride, Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate heptahydrate. They are ionic salts.
C12H22O11 is the odd man out because it is a molecular formula for sucrose (table sugar), while the others are chemical formulas for common salts (NaCl, KCl, CuSO4).
No, table salt has a formula of NaCl . I think (but not sure) that the only way of getting table salt through neutralization is when sodium hydroxide reacts with hydrogen chloride: NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O
Only some salts have hydrates, not all. These salts contain in the formula water of crystallization.
Salts can contain the majority of the elements from the periodic table of Mendeleev.
The rock salt is refined to obtain table salt: also iodine (as potassium iodide or iodate) and anticaking agents are added to table salt.
it is an ionic compound
All refined table salts are identical.
Kosher is one of them.