No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-).
Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
It's definitely an electrolyte--and a good enough one that they use it in batteries.
sulfuric acid is a nonelectrolyte
All the acids (nitric,hydrochloric,sulfuric) dissociate in water thus are electrolytes. Table salt (NaCl) also dissociates. Propane is a gas at RT and is nonpolar, does not dissociate in water and thus it is a nonelectrolyte
propane is non-electrolyte as it cannot produce ions
sulfuric acid or sulphuric acid
Sulfuric Acid is a powerful acid and not a base.
sulfuric acid is a nonelectrolyte
All the acids (nitric,hydrochloric,sulfuric) dissociate in water thus are electrolytes. Table salt (NaCl) also dissociates. Propane is a gas at RT and is nonpolar, does not dissociate in water and thus it is a nonelectrolyte
propane is non-electrolyte as it cannot produce ions
Only propane is non-electrolyte because it can not produce ions.
yes it is
sulfuric acid or sulphuric acid
Sulfuric Acid is a powerful acid and not a base.
Sulfuric acid
Sulfuric acid is a reagent.
Sulfuric acid is H2SO4
Sulfuric acid degrades
Concentrated sulfuric acid has sulfuric acid molecules where dilute sulfuric acid has sulfate ions and hydrogen ions. Water in the diluted solution acts as the ionization medium.