It does not. Sodium reacts with water as 2Na + 2H2O -> 2NaOH + H2. This reaction generate a lot of heat. So hydrogen ignites with oxygen from atmosphere.
It's hydrogen explodes and burn, not sodium. :)
Unbelievable. Are you that ignorant?
As Sodium Chloride? That's table salt, you moron.
This sodium chloride in water will instantly turn into sodium fluoride as soon as you will pass fluorine gas through water with sodium chloride. Same will happen with any other salt in water. If there will no non-fluoride salts left to react with, then fluoride will react with water producing HF and O2.
Fluorine does not exist as separate element in normal environment, it is always fluoride ion.
The reaction is explosion. You're too stupid to get that. I understand now.
Your next point just jumps to flouride because you don't understand chemistry.
I get it. You only talk about flouride and you can't figure out the compound sodium chloride. But I guess you will talk more about things you don't understand because the idiots in here can't figure out when you're wrong.
Sodium does not explode. It can't. It could slowly burn in oxygen-rich atmosphere. In air it is just silently oxidises.
It's hydrogen that explodes when you throw piece of sodium into water. If you can't understand that simple thing, then it's not in your interests to question my level of chemistry knowledge. :)
You only talk about flouride and you can't figure out the compound sodium chloride
Do you understand that fluoride ion is what matters in all that fluoride talks? It does not matter what metal it connected to.
So, you're still standing on the ground that I provided an example how you're wrong, but you're nitpicking my phrasing of the comment... Nice! So how is it going grammar nazi? Still you haven't proven your case.
If you can't understand that simple thing, then it's not in your interests to question my level of chemistry knowledge. :)
What chemistry knowledge? You only showed how much you don't understand sodium fluoride. I can help you with the many documentaries that I have on the topic, but it's interesting to observe you acting like an overinflated ass, who knows everything about anything. So, I will hold back with sharing actual facts with your egomaniacal tiny brain.
Do you understand that fluoride ion is what matters in all that fluoride talks? It does not matter what metal it connected to.
Well, don't be shy. Explain your case.
I would be happy to shut you off in a second, but it's more entertaining if you actually make a case.
But as always - you are "all talk and no game".
You have avoided the topic about sodium fluoride specifically. Let's hear your answer about sodium fluoride after all this nonsense that you produce.
Do you know that sodium explodes in water?
Yet, people take it every day in their mouth?
As Sodium Chloride? That's table salt, you moron.
But sure, try to explain chemistry to me, you absolute shill that knows nothing but still talks too much...
It does not. Sodium reacts with water as 2Na + 2H2O -> 2NaOH + H2. This reaction generate a lot of heat. So hydrogen ignites with oxygen from atmosphere.
It's hydrogen explodes and burn, not sodium. :)
Unbelievable. Are you that ignorant?
This sodium chloride in water will instantly turn into sodium fluoride as soon as you will pass fluorine gas through water with sodium chloride. Same will happen with any other salt in water. If there will no non-fluoride salts left to react with, then fluoride will react with water producing HF and O2.
Fluorine does not exist as separate element in normal environment, it is always fluoride ion.
The reaction is explosion. You're too stupid to get that. I understand now.
Your next point just jumps to flouride because you don't understand chemistry.
I get it. You only talk about flouride and you can't figure out the compound sodium chloride. But I guess you will talk more about things you don't understand because the idiots in here can't figure out when you're wrong.
But as always, you remain a dumbass.
Sodium does not explode. It can't. It could slowly burn in oxygen-rich atmosphere. In air it is just silently oxidises.
It's hydrogen that explodes when you throw piece of sodium into water. If you can't understand that simple thing, then it's not in your interests to question my level of chemistry knowledge. :)
Do you understand that fluoride ion is what matters in all that fluoride talks? It does not matter what metal it connected to.
So, you're still standing on the ground that I provided an example how you're wrong, but you're nitpicking my phrasing of the comment... Nice! So how is it going grammar nazi? Still you haven't proven your case.
What chemistry knowledge? You only showed how much you don't understand sodium fluoride. I can help you with the many documentaries that I have on the topic, but it's interesting to observe you acting like an overinflated ass, who knows everything about anything. So, I will hold back with sharing actual facts with your egomaniacal tiny brain.
Well, don't be shy. Explain your case.
I would be happy to shut you off in a second, but it's more entertaining if you actually make a case.
But as always - you are "all talk and no game".
You have avoided the topic about sodium fluoride specifically. Let's hear your answer about sodium fluoride after all this nonsense that you produce.
I'll wait.