Chemistry, asked by AnimeshJohnKujur, 30 days ago

What is the difference between NaCl (liquid) and Nacl (aqueous)?​

Answers

Answered by mshoaib1842
2

Explanation:

liquid is pure, melted NaCl. aqueous is when it's dissolved in water. only metal (conductor) and semicondutor are good conductor in the solid state because electron can more freely about the solid. a salt is non metallic, it's made of Na+ & Cl-.

Answered by FaizTOXIC
7

Answer:

NaCl(s) is solid sodium, usually crystals, that we use as table salt. The compound is in a crystalline structure with each compound lacking the energy to be mobile.

NaCl(aq) means the compound has been dissolved in water and has dissociated into positive ions (Na+) and negatively charged ions (Cl-) surrounded by water molecules.

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