Calcium bromide is an ionic solid, in the solid state it does not conduct electricity. Solutions do conduct, as does the melt.
Potassium Bromide will conduct electricity only when it is melted or dissolved in water
In solid form calcium chloride doesn't conduct electricity, but dissolved in water it conducts electricity quite well.
Sodium bromide is an ionic substance. It conducts electricity when melted or when dissolved in water. This is due to the sodium, Na+ ions and the Br- ions present. It does not conduct electricity in the solid state as the ions can not move.
Calcium Carbonate is insoluble in water, however calcium carbonate itself is an ionic compound and ionic bonds do conduct electricity.
Yes it does! Aluminum bromide is an ionic compound and aluminum alone is a very strong conductor.
Potassium Bromide will conduct electricity only when it is melted or dissolved in water
No.
sodium bromide can conduct electricity though not in high quantitiesAdded:So does potassium bromide, as all ionic salts do (more or less) 'in solutae'
In solid form calcium chloride doesn't conduct electricity, but dissolved in water it conducts electricity quite well.
Sodium bromide is an ionic substance. It conducts electricity when melted or when dissolved in water. This is due to the sodium, Na+ ions and the Br- ions present. It does not conduct electricity in the solid state as the ions can not move.
no
Calcium Carbonate is insoluble in water, however calcium carbonate itself is an ionic compound and ionic bonds do conduct electricity.
Yes it does! Aluminum bromide is an ionic compound and aluminum alone is a very strong conductor.
no
Potassium bromide can only conduct electricity when it is in liquid form.
No because it's a crystalline ionic solid. However, dissolve some KBr in water and it will conduct electricity nicely, because in solution it's an electrolyte, with lots of little K+ and Br- ions floating around.
Not really. Lead bromide's solubility in water is so low that it is generally considered to be insoluble.