Wate is molecular , H2O. NaCl is giant ionic laattice and is not molecular when normally encountered. In terms of mass the formula unit of NaCl is greater than than the molecular mass of water.
Depends on what you mean by "larger". And really one does not have a "molecule" of sodium chloride. Since it is a crystalline solid, you have a formula unit. The mass of 1 formula unit of sodium chloride is 58 g. The mass of one molecule of glucose is 180 g. So one molecule of glucose weighs more than 1 formula unit of NaCl. If you look at the actual physical "size" of a molecule of glucose compared to the "size" of a formula unit of NaCl, the glucose will be larger.
Sodium chloride form large lattices greater then the probable water associations.
I think starch is larger.
Glucose!
glucose
Glucose is not made from sodium chloride.
A molecule of sodium chloride A molecule of sodium chloride
The term molecule is not adequate for sodium chloride; the recommended term is formula unit.
Sodium Chloride is a molecule. A molecule contains 2 or more atoms. Each molecule of Sodium Chloride contains 1 sodium atom and 1 chloride atom.
Sodium chloride is NaCl
Sodium chloride is a a polar molecule.
no
Sodium chloride is a compound, not an element; sodium chloride is electrically neutral.
Yes, Sodium Chloride is an inorganic compound.
Glucose
The term molecule is not adequate for sodium chloride because NaCl form large lattices. More exact is formula unit - NaCl.
The chemical formula of sodium chloride is NaCl. The chemical formula of glucose is C6H12O6.