cuprousoxide, dinitrogen pentoxide, sodiumhydroxide..
NaOH
NaOH and HCl
KOH, NaOH, KCl, KBr, NaBr
Like other ionic compounds NaOH will not conduct electricity in its solid form, but will if dissolved in water or molten.
No, they should always not be. As an example, NaOH can be given.
generally ionic compounds like those compounds which dissolves into ions in water like NaCl,NaOH etc.
Salts are compounds obtained by the neutralization of an acid with a base; sodium chloride may be prepared from HCl and NaOH: HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
For example sodium hydroxide ant caesium hydroxide: NaOH, CsOH.
Hc2H3O2 and NaC2H2O2 or HCL and NaOH or HNO3and NaNO3 or KCL and NaOH?
For example sodium hydroxide ant caesium hydroxide: NaOH, CsOH.
NaOH is an ionic solid i.e. it dissociates into ions: Na+ which is a cation and OH- which is an anion. Water is a polar molecule, so NaOH is soluble in water. However, if the water solution becomes supersaturated with NaOH and you keep adding NaOH granules, these will not dissolve.
Many compounds that have OH- in them are bases such as NaOH, KOH, LiOH, Mg(OH)_2...ect