if The solutions conduct electricity! They are called ELECTROLYTES
They are bonded by ionic bond. They are electricity conductor in molten state or aqueous solution.
Not all ionic compounds dissolve into electrolytes. Only ionic compounds that dissociate into ions in solution and conduct electricity are considered electrolytes. Some ionic compounds do not dissolve well in water and consequently do not conduct electricity.
Ionic compounds contain positively and negatively charged ions that are free to move when dissolved in a solvent, enabling them to conduct electricity. This ability to conduct electricity is what classifies ionic compounds as electrolytes.
Compounds which are not ionic are commonly not electrolytes. An ionic compound is a compound composed of a metal and a nonmetal, such as NaCl or AgI. Compounds with different compositions are not electrolytes.
Ionic compounds, solutions, molten salts, and electrolytes all contain ions. These ions can be positively charged (cations) or negatively charged (anions) and are responsible for conducting electricity in these substances.
No, not all minerals are electrolytes. Electrolytes are minerals that carry an electric charge when dissolved in a liquid, such as sodium, potassium, and chloride. Other minerals like calcium, iron, and zinc do not function as electrolytes in the body.
Yes. It is an ionic compound, and all ionic compounds are crystalline solids at room temperature.
Urine is a liquid waste product composed of water, electrolytes, and waste substances like urea and creatinine. It is not a compound but a complex mixture.
All ionic substances are indeed ionic, that is to say that contain positively charged cations and negatively charged anions. All ionic substances crystallize into small crystal when they are in their solid form
You can NOT dissolve 'covalent BONDS' because a bond is one couple of two electrons which hold their two 'parent' atoms together in one molecule.Try asking the question again with what you want to know, not what you have only 'heard of'.
All ionic substances are written as separate ions in solution
there is no net ionic equation. theoretically, there would be a double replacement reaction: 2KBr (aq) + Ca(C2H3O2)2 (aq) --> CaBr2 (aq) + 2KC2H3O2 (aq) however, CaBr2 and KC2H3O2 are both soluble. net ionic equations include only the species that undergo change in an aqueous solution. since all the ions start out as being dissolved in solution, and all the ions end as being dissolved in solution, no ions undergo change, and there is not net ionic equation.