QUESTION IMAGE
Question
what is the correct electron dot formula for sodium chloride?\
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\\(\boldsymbol{\circ\\ \left\
\
ight^+\\ \\:\left\
\
ight^-}\\)\
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\\(\boldsymbol{\circ\\ \left\
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ight^+\\ \\ \left\
\
ight^-}\\) (with electron dots around cl)\
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\\(\boldsymbol{\circ\\ \left\
\
ight^+\\ \\ \left\
\
ight^-}\\) (with electron dots around na)\
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\\(\boldsymbol{\circ\\ \left\
\
ight^+\\ \\ \left\
\
ight^-}\\) (with electron dots around both na and cl))
Sodium chloride is an ionic compound. Sodium (Na) has 1 valence electron, which it loses to form a $\text{Na}^+$ ion with no remaining valence electrons. Chlorine (Cl) has 7 valence electrons; it gains 1 electron to form a $\text{Cl}^-$ ion with a full octet (8 valence electrons). The electron dot structure shows the charged ions separately, with the chloride ion having 8 dots around it.
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$\boldsymbol{[Na]^+ \ [:\ddot{Cl}:]^-}$ (the second option)