Potassium chloride is an ionic solid, the ionic solids can conduct the electricity if they are in molten state or in aqueous solution.
Beacause they consist of free ions which conduct electricity
No.
In an aqueous solution sodium chloride can in fact conduct electricity. This is because within an aqueous solution ions are free to move while as a solid NaCl will not conduct any electricity
yes, molten sodium chloride may conduct the electricity but is not a good electrolyte.
The element copper can conduct electricity. These are two completely different chemical substances.
Copper II chloride (CuCl2) is an ionic compound because copper is a metal and chloride is a non-metal. Like all ionic compounds in aqueous solutions (i.e., dissolved in water), it conducts electricity.
Cesium Chloride can only conduct electricity in water or while molten. Once cesium chloride is in a solid state it will not conduct electricity.
As copper and chlorine are bonded by ionic bonding , they are placed in a crystal lattice and there is no free moving ions to conduct electricity at the solid state. In molten state, the ions are free to move about.
Because it is a non metal and does not conduct electricity
In solid form calcium chloride doesn't conduct electricity, but dissolved in water it conducts electricity quite well.
no
Solid sodium chloride doesn't conduct electricity.
Potassium chloride is an ionic solid, the ionic solids can conduct the electricity if they are in molten state or in aqueous solution.
Beacause they consist of free ions which conduct electricity
no
No