No, strong electrolytes completely dissociate into ions when dissolved in water.
An electrolyte is a substance that dissociates into ions when dissolved in water. The formula for an electrolyte such as table salt (sodium chloride) is NaCl, which dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions in solution.
As sodium sulfite (Na2SO4) dissolves, it dissociates into its ions: Na2SO4 --> 2Na+ + SO32-
every gas can be ionised, in fact, any chemical can be ionised.
In a chemical reaction involving acetic acid, not all of the acetic acid molecules will dissociate completely, even at equilibrium. This is because acetic acid is a weak acid and only partially dissociates into ions in solution.
No. It is a physical process, so it technically isn't a reaction.
A chemical equation represents a reaction that occurs in a liquid medium. When a chemical species dissolves and forms a solution with water, it is denoted by "(aq)" in the chemical equation. This indicates that the species is now in the aqueous state.
A chemical that dissolves in another chemical is called "a solute".
Chemical, if it dissolves in a solution such is acid. Physical if one mean dissolves like disintegrates.
The important chemical that dissolves other chemicals is WATER...
It depends on the electrolyte.
Common name: Electrolyte Chemical name: Sodium chloride Chemical formula: NaCl
A weak acid only partially dissociates in water, while a strong acid fully dissociates. This means that weak acids have lower reactivity and are less likely to donate hydrogen ions compared to strong acids.