Yes, Sodium hypochlorite is a fine ionic compound. It will pass an electric current.
No but chloride ions are.
At the positive electrode electrons are removed from the solution. If chloride ions (Cl-) are present the will each lose and electron to form chlorine atoms, which then bond together to from Cl2 molecules, which is chlorine gas. Chlorine is extremely toxic, which is why you shouldn't use table salt (sodium chloride) as an electrolyte.
It is a strong electrolyte
Wax is not an electrolyte.
It is a strong electrolyte
The solution is an electrolyte
The scope is to obtain pure sodium and chlorine.
No, it is an ionic compound of Sodium and Chlorine. NaCl. Sodium Chloride.
Chlorine is a strong electrolyte - it always completely dissociates in water. HCl (hydrochloric acid) is a strong acid as well, for the same reason.
At the positive electrode electrons are removed from the solution. If chloride ions (Cl-) are present the will each lose and electron to form chlorine atoms, which then bond together to from Cl2 molecules, which is chlorine gas. Chlorine is extremely toxic, which is why you shouldn't use table salt (sodium chloride) as an electrolyte.
Salt in water (if this is for apex) Explanation: because salt is made of two elements, sodium and chlorine, which easily dissolve into water into ions, they create an electrolyte solution. Remember that an electrolyte solution is a solution that generally contains ions, atoms or molecules that have lost or gained electrons, and is electrically conductive (from Google). Hope this helps!
A strong electrolyte is an electrolyte that exists in solution almost entirely as ions. An example is NaCl. When NaCl dissolves in water, it dissolves almost completely to give Na+ and Cl- ions.
Its a non electrolyte.
Yes, because sodium chloride solution is an electrolyte; this solution contain cations of sodium (Na+) and anions of chlorine (Cl-).
It is an electrolyte
In (aquous) solution it is an electrolyte
It is a strong electrolyte
Salt water, which in some respect is an electrolyte. When dissolved in water, table salt (NaCl, sodium chloride) breaks up into sodium and chlorine ions.