Argon is not an electrolyte. Argon is a noble gas and does not conduct and carry an electric circuit in water.
No. An electrolyte is a substance in an aqueous solution that conducts electricity due to the presence of ions. Since Argon by itself is an atom and does not have any ions, it's not an electrolyte. It does not dissociate, or break apart into ions, in a solution so it cannot conduct electricity.A general rule: electrolytes are usually strong acids and bases and salts.
Its a non electrolyte.
In (aquous) solution it is an electrolyte
Chromic acid is an electrolyte.
Neither, it's a non-electrolyte.
No. An electrolyte is a substance in an aqueous solution that conducts electricity due to the presence of ions. Since Argon by itself is an atom and does not have any ions, it's not an electrolyte. It does not dissociate, or break apart into ions, in a solution so it cannot conduct electricity.A general rule: electrolytes are usually strong acids and bases and salts.
Its a non electrolyte.
It is an electrolyte
In (aquous) solution it is an electrolyte
It is a strong electrolyte
Chromic acid is an electrolyte.
It is a weak electrolyte used as rust remover.
Neither, it's a non-electrolyte.
it is a covalent compound so it is a non-electrolyte.
No, it is a weak electrolyte.
Nonelectrolyte
no, it is not a strong electrolyte. It is a weak electrolyte