yes, pure water is a non electrolyte liquid.
Distilled water isn't really considered an electrolyte. Because it has been distilled, the water has had all its ions removed. No ions means no electrolytic properties. And before you jump on it, yes, there will still be some H+ and OH- ions in pure water. But water, if it's pure, won't conduct electricity and won't be considered 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).
Carbontetrachloride, CCl4, is not an electrolyte. To be an electrolyte, the solution must contain dissolved ions. All pure liquids, with only a few exceptions, are not electrolytes.
If you put two metal electrodes in an electrolyte, such as salt water, electrons will flow from the less-noble metal to the more-noble one. If you use two electrodes of the same metal, there is no difference in nobility so no current will flow.
yes, pure water is a non electrolyte liquid.
no pure water isn't
water is an weak electrolyte because of strong hydrogen bonding between water molecules
No. Pure water will not conduct electricity.
No, certaily not. It is a non-electrolyte, much weaker than pure water.
The pure gas is not an electrolyte. In water, it is an extremely weak acid so there would be a tiny bit of conduction.
water is an weak electrolyte because of strong hydrogen bonding between water molecules
hydrometer
Distilled water isn't really considered an electrolyte. Because it has been distilled, the water has had all its ions removed. No ions means no electrolytic properties. And before you jump on it, yes, there will still be some H+ and OH- ions in pure water. But water, if it's pure, won't conduct electricity and won't be considered an electrolyte.
Electrolytes are liquids which will conduct an electrical current. Pure H2O, or water, is not an electrolyte. However, a large number of salts can be dissolved in water, which will cause it to become an electrolyte.
Pure water is considered a non-electrolyte because it is PURE. That means there are no added minerals, no dissolved salts, and no particles of any kind, just water.
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).