In sodium chloride, the ratio is 1/1.
It is Sodium Chloride, so has the chemical symbol NaCl. This means that for each atom of Sodium, there is one atom of Chlorine.
1:1, one mole potassium to one mole chlorine
The answer will depend on the context. Are you interested in the ratio of chlorine to:other halides on earth (or other astronomical body),other chemicals in the earth (or other astronomical body),other elements in some compound(s),required to clean a swimming pooland so on.But since you have not bothered to share that crucial bit of information, I cannot provide a more useful answer.
A group of German psychologists wanted to know how the mind organized sensations into perceptions. The individual organizes a cluster of sensations into a gestalt or "whole". They were fond of saying that in perception, "the whole may exceed the sum of its parts." (sodium = corrosive metal, chlorine = poisonous gas; sodium + chlorine = table salt). Aristotle did not originate that phase. It is not found in any of his writings in Greek or in modern English translations.
If the ratio of similarity is 310, then the ratio of their area is 96100.
The atomic ratio in this salt is 1:1. The mass ratio is 22.999:35.457 of sodium to chlorine, the ratio of the atomic weights of sodium and chlorine.
The ratio mass of chlorine/mass of sodium is 1,5.
60,33417 % chlorine and 39,66583 % sodium
2:4
The atomic ratio between sodium and chlorine in sodium chloride is 1:1, as indicated by its formula NaCl. If the mass ratio is wanted, it is that of the atomic weights of the two elements.
23 g of sodium to 35.5 g Chlorine
Sodium chloride has a 1 to 1 ratio of its constituent atoms, sodium and chlorine. Sodium chloride, table salt, is a two-atom molecule. One atom of sodium is bonded to one atom of chlorine. The two atoms have combine to make a molecule of salt in a one-to-one ratio.
There is no carbon in sodium chloride. Sodium chloride, what we call table salt, contains sodium and chlorine in a one-to-one ratio. These molecules have no carbon in them at all.
The sodium atom loses an electron to chlorine. Chlorine has a higher electronegativity so it attracts the electron from sodium. Sodium now has 11 positive protons holding only 10 electrons whereas chlorine has an extra electron to control. Chlorine has 17 protons holding 18 negative electrons, therefore, its proton to electron ratio has gone down. Sodium's proton to electron ratio went up, therefore, the electrons are closer to the nucleus and the ionic radius is less than the atomic radius.
The components of sodium chloride (sodium and chlorine) are chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio and definite structure. A mixture does not have these traits.
When in elemental form, atoms of sodium lose electrons to atoms of chlorine, forming ions (this occurs in a 1:1 ratio). These ions are attracted by the electric difference between them and form a salt.
Sodium + Chlorine ---> Sodium Chloride I think that is correct