Most electrolytes are mixtures not compounds. Some examples are baking soda and H2O, salt water (NaCl + H2O), copper sulfate (CuSO4 + H20), and sodium sulfite (Na2SO3 + H20).
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Molten salts, including some that are liquid at room temperature.
Water with nothing dissolved in it would be a very weak electrolyte, because of its spontaneous ionization to produce at (25C) a 10-7 molar concentration of each of hydrogen cations and hydroxide anions.
An ionic solution can be considered an electrolyte, as the individual ions dissolve. One example would be a solution of sodium chloride, in which the individual ions dissociate in solution.
NaCl(s) --> Na+(aq) + Cl−(aq)
Ionic Compounds.
When you melt ionic compounds such as NaCl, the liquid phase is an electrolyte
Compounds in the liquid phase can be considered an electrolyte
An electrolyte may be an electrolyte but not all liquids are electrolytes.
NaCl (sodium chloride)
This is a solution of an ionic compound.
CO 2 (carbon dioxide) NaCl (sodium chloride) H 2 O (distilled water) H 2 O 2 (hydrogen peroxide)
HPLC stands for high performance liquid chromatography. It is a liquid chromatography which involves the separation of the compounds on the basis of their polarity. It is used to analyze, identify, purify & quantify the compounds.
yes it is transition from the liquid phase to gas phase
H2O and NaCl
NaCl
sodium chloride, distilled water
NaCl (sodium chloride)
No
Kathryn S Alber has written: 'Electroanalytical studies of solid electrolytes in the presence and absence of a liquid phase' -- subject(s): Electrochemical analysis, Chemistry, Electrolytes
GLC has a stationary liquid phase and gas moving phase HPLC had a stationary solid phase and liquid moving phase HPLC is done under high pressure. HPLC can be used for thermally unstable compounds as opposed to GLC HPLC can be used for polar or low volatile compounds as opposed to GLC
This is a solution of an ionic compound.
Hans Engels has written: 'Phase equilibria and phase diagrams of electrolytes' -- subject(s): Phase rule and equilibrium, Phase diagrams, Thermal properties, Electrolytes
yes, but sodium chloride has a melting point of 801 degrees C, so I doubt you would want to ingest melted NaCl.
Yes, it is ionic.
CO 2 (carbon dioxide) NaCl (sodium chloride) H 2 O (distilled water) H 2 O 2 (hydrogen peroxide)