Liquid sodium chloride is a conductor but not the best.
Crystalline sodium chloride is an insulator.Liquid or melted sodium chloride is a conductor.
Not in it's usual solid state. But sodium chloride will conduct electricity of molten or dissolved in water.
Soluble ionic compounds are excellent conductors of electricity when dissolved in water - such as sodium chloride (common salt)
Sodium chloride become a liquid at 801 0C.
Sodium chloride solution is an electrolyte containg ions as Na+ and Cl-. Sodium solid crystal is not an electrolyte, is not dissociated.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrical conductor.
Sodium chloride in solution or melted is a good conductor of electricity; but sodium chloride doesn't produce electricity.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrical conductor.
Not positive, but fairly sure that solid sodium chloride is not a conductor. Molten sodium chloride is a good conductor.
When it is a solid sodium chloride is not an electrical conductor.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte only in water solutions or when is melted. Solid sodium chloride is not a conductor of electricity.
Yes because this is an ionic compound so when its dissovled in water the ions are free to conduct electricity
Molten sodium chloride consists of sodium ions and chloride ions and is therefore a conductor of electricity- and can be electrlysed.
Yes, a saline solution is a conductor.
Crystalline sodium chloride is an insulator.Liquid or melted sodium chloride is a conductor.
Yes. It forms sodium positive ions (cations) and negative chloride ions (anions).
They conduct better because then they break up into ions