Dissolved or (melted) sodium chloride is an electrolyte.
Because sodium chloride solution is an electrolyte, containing ions Na+ and Cl-. Solid NaCl is not an electrolyte.
No. Although an electrolyte must be at least somewhat soluble in water, in pure form an electrolyte may be a solid (such as sodium chloride), liquid (such as sulfuric acid), or gas (such as hydrogen chloride).
Sodium chloride solution is an electrolyte containg ions as Na+ and Cl-. Sodium solid crystal is not an electrolyte, is not dissociated.
Lithium chloride
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Potassium chloride, KCl, is an electrolyte, because in water it dissociates into solvated potassium and chloride ions.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte only in solution or as melted, when is completely dissociated in ions.
Lead nitrate is actually Pb(NO3)2 It is a strong electrolyte.
Melted sodium chloride is an electrolyte containing the cation Na+and the anion Cl-.
Dissolved or (melted) sodium chloride is an electrolyte.
As for your body, the major electrolytes are as follows:sodium (Na+)potassium (K+)chloride (Cl-)calcium (Ca2+)magnesium (Mg2+)bicarbonate (HCO3-)phosphate (PO42-)sulfate (SO42-)
yes
Yes, it is a electrolyte. Bez has a ability to relese the one electron.
Yes. Its polar bonds make it so that the Cl- and Na+ separate in water.
iron is an non electrolyte
electrolyte solution