Monosodium glutamate (MSG) and sodium chloride are two different ionic compounds, the former being a salt of glutamic acid.
MSG has the following properties (among others)
Sodium chloride is also known as table salt
No, sodium myreth sulfate and sodium chloride are different compounds. Sodium myreth sulfate is a surfactant commonly used in personal care products for its cleansing properties, while sodium chloride is table salt commonly used as a seasoning or food preservative.
The products of the reaction between sodium chloride (NaCl) and calcium sulfate (CaSO4) would be calcium chloride (CaCl2) and sodium sulfate (Na2SO4).
NaCl is sodium chloride and Na2SO4 is sodium sulfate; chemicals with different composition or structure have different chemical and physical properties.
Sodium chloride has the chemical formula NaCl and sodium sulfate has the chemical formula Na2SO4.
When you add sodium sulfate to barium chloride, a white precipitate of barium sulfate forms. This is due to the reaction between sodium sulfate and barium chloride, which forms insoluble barium sulfate.
Any difference - the formula unit is NaCl.
Sodium chloride is NaCl; if you think to sodium hydride this is NaH.
Epsom salt is magnesium sulfate (MgSO4·7H2O), table salt is sodium chloride (NaCl).
Strontium chloride and sodium sulfate will react to form strontium sulfate and sodium chloride. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the cations and anions of the two compounds switch partners.
The solution is a liquid containing dissociated sodium chloride.
The reaction is a double displacement reaction as lead chloride and sodium sulfate exchange ions to form lead sulfate and sodium chloride. The lead sulfate is insoluble in water, forming a precipitate, while the sodium chloride remains in solution as ions. This reaction is used to separate lead ions from a mixture.
Barium chloride can be precipitated wit a sulfate; barium sulfate is then filtrated.