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The answer depends on what the solvent is and how much there is.
Many common salts are covalently bound when together but dissolve into constituent ions when dissolved in water. Two examples are sodium chloride and calcium chloride.
2 ions
there are two ions. Ni and CO3.
Most salt dissolve in water, then they're electrolytes by forming ions in solution.
All the simple sugars having the formula C6H12O6 are completely covalently bonded and thus produce no ions when they dissolve.
Many ionic compounds do NOT dissolve in water- such as calcium carbonate. The majority do and that is because the solvation of the ions is energetically favourable in those compounds.
Water can dissolve so many different substances because water has an unequel distribution of positive and negative charges(polar molecule) which attract many ions and other polar molecules.
No. Water is a largely covalent compound that spontaneously ionizes only to give concentrations of 10-7 molar for each of hydrogen and hydroxide ions. However water also has a high dielectric constant and for that reason can dissolve many ionic compounds. Water can also dissolve sufficiently polar organic compounds, such as sugar, with little or no trace of ionic character.
The answer depends on what the solvent is and how much there is.
One formula unit of MgBr2 has three ions; one Mg2+ ion and two Br- ions. One mole of MgBr2 formula units has one mole of Mg2+ ions and two moles of Br- ions, for a total of three moles of ions.
Two types: silver (Ag+) and chromate (CrO4-2) And within the formula (Ag2CrO4) there are two silver ions and one chromate ion for a total of three ions.
When ionic solids (such as table salt) dissolve in water, they are completely dissociated into ions. For example, when NaCl (table salt) is dissolved, it is "split" into Cl- and Na+ (an anion and a cation). This is because water molecules are polar and produce a stronger attractive force on the individual anions and cations than the ions do on themselves. This is the reason why water can dissolve so many substances and why it is considered a universal solvent.
The answer will depend on what solvent you are adding the sugar to and how much of it there is.
Often - yes. the reason they break apart is the hydration energy of the ions- many ionic compounds are soluble in water and dissociate into ions, however there are ionic solids such as CaCO3 which are not soluble. The bonds in covalent compunds are often not broken- for example thise in alkanes. However there are covalent compounds which do react with water and dissolve.
This is a wrong question. Ionic bonding is a term referring to the attractive forces between the charged ions of an ionic compound. If you meant to ask " Do ionic compounds dissolve in water? ", the answer is yes. Most of them do. This is because the polar water molecules are easily separate the ions in the ionic solid. However, for unknown reasons, some ionic compounds do not dissolve in water. An example is Silver Chloride.
6 teaspoons At least 6 teaspoons of sugar added until it will no longer dissolve.