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These substances are the electrolytes.
There is no symbol for non-electrolytes as they are not any single substance. Most non-electrolytes are compounds rather than elements and so have formulas, not symbols.
Ionic compounds produce electrolytes; covalent compounds not.
Compounds which are not ionic are commonly not electrolytes. An ionic compound is a compound composed of a metal and a nonmetal, such as NaCl or AgI. Compounds with different compositions are not electrolytes.
There is no symbol for non-electrolytes as they are not any single substance. Most non-electrolytes are compounds rather than elements and so have formulas, not symbols.
This depends on the kind of dissociation: Salts, many acids and bases are electrolytes when dissociating in ION's. On the contrary some dissociating molecules are non-electrolytes. By example hydrogen peroxide, dissolved in water, dissociates into two new non-ionic compounds (water and oxygen) so it is a non-electrolyte. However most non-electrolytes do NOT dissociate when dissolved in water, example sugar.
There are strong electrolytes and weak and non electrolytes. There is no very strong, or pretty strong, electrolytes. If they are strong, they are strong. So, in lemons, you have salts which are strong electrolytes, and you have citric acid, which is a weak electrolyte.
True
strong
makes them non-electrolytes and non-conductor
Not necessarily. Many organic compounds are non-electrolytes, though some, including organic acids and their salts, are electrolytes.
A liquid without electrolytes, such as sodium, chlorine.