MgBr2 is an ionic compound.It is an electrolyte either in molten state or in aqueous solution because in both the states ions can move freely and conduct electricity. But it is not an electrolyte in Solid state because in solid state, ions are firmly bound together and can not move freely, so it behaves as a non-electrolyte in solid state. For more details, contact at saqibahmad81@Yahoo.com
yes,
All ionic compounds are strong electrolytes, because they mostly break up into ions as
they dissolve in water. Even insoluble ionic compounds (e.g., AgCl, PbSO4, CaCO3) are
strong electrolytes, because the small amounts that do dissolve in water do so principally
as ions; i.e., there is virtually no undissociated form of the compound in solution.
It is a strong electrolye. Despite being highly insoluble in water, the little amount of it that does dissolve completely dissociates into its component ions (Ag+ and Cl-), hence it is a strong electrolyte.
Yes, because in solution this compound, sodium ion and polyatomic ion perchlorate, disassociate almost 100%
Na +
and
ClO4 -
Thus a strong electric current is established.
AgNO3 is a strong electrolyte. Most salts containing nitrates and nitrites are highly soluble.
yes, MgBr2 is an electrolyte. In fact, it is a strong electrolyte :) hope this helps
MgSO4 is a strong electrolyte because it dissociates completely in solution.
Yes
it will form (Ba2+) and (2Cl-) ions per 1 mole of each Barium Chloride, in an aqueous(water) solution.
Magnesium nitrate is a strong electrolyte.
Zinc chloride is a strong electrolyte.
KMnO4 is a strong electrolyte.
No, it is a weak electrolyte.
no, it is not a strong electrolyte. It is a weak electrolyte
KOH is a strong electrolyte
no
KMnO4 is a strong electrolyte.
It is a strong electrolyte
No, it is a weak electrolyte.
no, it is not a strong electrolyte. It is a weak electrolyte
Strong electrolyte
KOH is a strong electrolyte
no
Iron oxide isn't an electrolyte.
Yes. HNO3 is an electrolyte. In water, it will dissolve into H+ ions and NO3- ions.
weak electrolyte
Aluminium carbonate is a weak electrolyte.
Neither, it's a non-electrolyte.