Yes. Molten copper is just in the liquid phase but the mobile elctrons that compose the metallic bonds are still there hence it will still be a conductor.
It does not conduct electricity
a molten one
Beacause they consist of free ions which conduct electricity
Ionic compounds will not conduct electricity as solids, which is what they are at room temperature. However, they will conduct electricity if molten or dissolved in water.
When molten or dissolved in water.
The element copper can conduct electricity. These are two completely different chemical substances.
As copper and chlorine are bonded by ionic bonding , they are placed in a crystal lattice and there is no free moving ions to conduct electricity at the solid state. In molten state, the ions are free to move about.
It does not conduct electricity
Yes. Molten copper is just in the liquid phase but the mobile elctrons that compose the metallic bonds are still there hence it will still be a conductor.
I didn't know electricity had a molten state...
a molten one
Copper and molten sodium chloride are electrical conductors.
Because in solution the ions Cu2+ and (SO4)2- are formed. In copper (metal) electrons can move free.
Beacause they consist of free ions which conduct electricity
Do_ionic_compounds_conduct_electricitycompounds conduct electricity when they are either dissolved in water of they are molten. If they remain a solid then they will not conduct electricity
Not in its standard solid state. But it will conduct electricity if molten or dissolved in water.
Ionic compounds will not conduct electricity as solids, which is what they are at room temperature. However, they will conduct electricity if molten or dissolved in water.