For example salts dissociated in water are electrolytes. Also some molten salts etc.
It is not an electrolyte as such. It needs to have salts in it that conduct electricity in order to be a complete electrolyte.
In water solution or in molten state NaCl is a strong electrolyte.
Electrolyte
an acidic liquid
h
electrolyte solutions
Potassium bromide (KBr) is a salt that dissociates into potassium ions (K+) and bromide ions (Br-) when dissolved in water, making it an electrolyte. It is a strong electrolyte because it completely dissociates into its ions in solution, enabling it to conduct electricity.
It is an electrolyte
There is loss of potassium salts when you use diuretics.
Its a non electrolyte.
A strong electrolyte completely dissociates into ions in solution, a weak electrolyte partially dissociates, and a non-electrolyte does not dissociate at all.
Any solution that conducts electricity is called an electrolyte; salt water, also known as an aqueous solution of NaCl, is a type of electrolyte, although certainly not the only type.