AlCl3 is a strong electrolyte when dissolved in water it gives complete ionisation: Al3+ + 3 Cl-
It is a strong electrolyte
Ammonium is a weak acid.
Nonelectrolyte
Calcium nitrate is a strong electrolyte. Ca(NO3)2 completely dissociates in an aqueous solution to form Ca2+ cations and NO3- anions; classifying it as a strong electrolyte. The higher the ion concentration in a solution, the higher the conductivity of the solution, and thus, the stronger the electrolyte (strong electrolyte = any solution with a conductivity above 1.00 mS).
Yes: dissolving in water giving complete electryte solution: CaI2 --> Ca2+ + 2I-
Yes, because acetic acid is a weak acid (therefore it is a weak electrolyte), but NaCl is a salt that ionizes completely. In general salts and strong acids and bases are strong electrolyte, while weak acids and weak bases are weak electrolytes.
Lead nitrate is actually Pb(NO3)2 It is a strong electrolyte.
Aluminium carbonate is a weak electrolyte.
Iron oxide isn't an electrolyte.
This is a weak electrolyte.
KMnO4 is a strong electrolyte.
No, it is a weak electrolyte.
no, it is not a strong electrolyte. It is a weak electrolyte
No, KI is a strong electrolyte. All soluble salts are strong electrolytes, and KI is a salt since it is an ionic compound, but not an acid or a base.
It is strong and is used as a solvent.
It is a weak electrolyte.
It is a strong electrolyte