No
Yes, calcium chloride is a good conductor of electricity when dissolved in water. The dissolved ions in calcium chloride allow the flow of electric current through the solution. However, solid calcium chloride is not a good conductor of electricity because it does not contain free-moving ions.
Magnesium chloride is not a good conductor of electricity in its solid form. However, when dissolved in water, it can conduct electricity because it dissociates into ions, which are able to carry electric charge.
Water in general is a good conductor of electricity. Anything wet will therefore be a good conductor (this makes it dangerous to get certain things wet).Actually, pure (distilled) water is not a good conductor; the fact that water usually IS a good conductor is due to diverse substances dissolved in water, such as salts - the ions make the water a good conductor.
Filtered hot water is a better conductor of electricity than cold water due to the increased presence of dissolved minerals. Filtered water at normal temperature may conduct some electricity due to dissolved minerals, but it is not as conductive as hot water. Distilled water is a poor conductor of electricity because it lacks dissolved minerals and ions that are needed for conducting electricity.
Potassium chloride is a poor conductor of electricity in its solid form. However, when dissolved in water, it dissociates into ions (K+ and Cl-) that can carry electrical charge and thus conducts electricity.
in its solid form, no. but dissolved in water, yes.
HCl, which is hydrochloric acid, is a weak conductor of electricity in comparison to strong acids like sulfuric acid or hydrochloric acid. When dissolved in water, HCl partially dissociates into hydrogen ions and chloride ions, allowing it to conduct electricity to some extent.
No, oxygen itself is not a good conductor of electricity, even when mixed with water. Water itself is a poor conductor of electricity, unless it contains dissolved ions or impurities that can carry electrical charge.
salt water is a good conductor of electricity as it contains sodium and chloride ions to carry out current
Distilled water is a poor conductor of electricity because it lacks ions and impurities that are needed for the conduction of electric current. Pure water molecules do not dissociate to form ions easily, making it a non-conductor of electricity.
Salt (sodium chloride) is a good conductor of electricity when mixed with water because it dissociates into ions (sodium and chloride) in the water, allowing the flow of electricity through the solution.
Bromine, as the element is called on its own is a nonmetal, and is a poor conductor of electricity. Bromide salts conduct electricity if dissolved in water or molten, but not in their normal solid states.