Not usually. With a sufficiently high voltage, however, nitrogen can be caused to ionize and then can conduct electricity.
Yes
Hydrochloric acid can conduct electricty.
Potassium bromide can only conduct electricity when it is in liquid form.
No. Carbon Dioxide is covalently bonded, so there are no delocalised(free moving) electrons to carry the charge.
In aqueous form, the ionic compounds dissolve into there separate ions, and the charge can be transferred between the ions
No it doesn't .
Yes
Hydrochloric acid can conduct electricty.
Most metals do.
yes, as all it's constituent substances can also conduct electricity
Potassium bromide can only conduct electricity when it is in liquid form.
Yes, particularly acidic ones like citrus.
if something has delocalised electrons it has the possibilty to conduct electricty
yes gold is a good conducter of heat and electricity
When CaCl2 is placed in water, CaCl2 dissociates, Ca+ and Cl- and ions conduct electricty.
When external source such as a battery is connected electrons get specific directions to move and condition starts
No. Carbon Dioxide is covalently bonded, so there are no delocalised(free moving) electrons to carry the charge.