No. Covalent molecular compounds generally from liquids that contain the neutral molcules. These will not be affected by an electric field and therefore no electricity will be conducted.
Melted wax does not conduct electricity because it is an insulator. Insulators do not allow electricity to flow through them because the electrons in the material are tightly bound and cannot move freely to conduct an electric current. This makes melted wax a poor conductor of electricity.
polar covalent are caused by
They can't. There must be an electrolyte mixed in. For example distilled water doesn't conduct electricity and it is a polar covalent compound. However, when you mix in salt, it does conduct electricity.
Polar Covalent.
Polar Covalent
Polar
H2O has polar covalent bonds, not non-polar covalent bonds.
Non-polar covalent bonds do not conduct electricity because they have equally shared electrons between atoms, leading to no charged particles (ions) that can move to carry an electric current. Conductivity in a material typically requires the presence of charged particles that are free to move.
Carbon monoxide has a polar covalent bond.
The type of bonding that results in a substance that can conduct electricity when dissolved in water is metallic bonding. Metallic bonds involve the sharing of electrons between atoms in a metal lattice, allowing for the movement of electrons, which promotes electrical conductivity. Non-polar covalent bonds, on the other hand, do not result in substances that can conduct electricity.
All types of covalent compounds are not very good conductors of electricity. However, ionic compounds in their molten state and metallic substances are very good conductors of electricity.
Polar covalent. The difference in electronegtivity is insufficient for an ionic bond