Yes, NaCl is an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride is a strong electrolyte in solution or melted because is dissociaced in ions Na+ and Cl-.
Because by dissociation ions as Na+ and Cl- are formed.
1 M NaCl is an electrolyte because when dissolved in water, it dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions, which can conduct electricity.
In solution or melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte containing ions Na+ and Cl-.
The scope is to obtain pure sodium and chlorine.
Because ions (Na+ and Cl-) cannot move in their crystallic (= solid) lattice. When dissolved in water they can freely move around seperately: Na+ moves to the cathode (- , negative electrode) Cl- move to the + side anode.
Sodium chloride solution is an electrolyte containg ions as Na+ and Cl-. Sodium solid crystal is not an electrolyte, is not dissociated.
There is no such thing as NaCI. You most likely mean NaCl (with a lowercase L) which is an electrolyte.
1. Water solution of sodium chloride is an electrolyte containing ions as Na+ and Cl-. 2. Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte. 3. Also sugar is not an electrolyte.
1. Salt is soluble in water solutions where NaCl is dissociated forming ions Na+ and Cl-. Consequently the solution become an electrolyte. or 2. Molten sodium chloride is also an electrolyte.
Melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte containing the cation Na+and the anion Cl-.
its an electrolyte , the electric is actually coming from the metals u put it in it though, potatos just contain the Na+ and Cl- ions