most ionic compounds will dissolve in water to form ions in solution.
Solubility is the ability of an ionic compound t dissociate in a solution.
ionic
the diffrent is when an ionic compound dissolves in water it breaks up into ions while a molecular compound breaks up into molecules.
No, this is a neutralization reaction 2NaOH + H2SO4 --> Na2SO4 + 2H2O An ionic salt (dissolves in solution ) and water produced.
No. In its pure, gaseous form Ammonia is molecular - formula NH3, formed with covalent bonds throughout. However, when ammonia dissolves in water (it is VERY soluble in water by the way...) it reacts with the water forming an ionic solution - ammonium hydroxide. This has the formula NH4 OH . the NH4 is a positive ion with a single + charge, and the OH is a negative ion with a single negative charge. Ammonium hydroxide only exists as a solution in water however; as soon as you try to concentrate the solution up by evaporation, the ammonium hydroxide breaks back down into ammonia gas and water.
... solution.
No.
salt is an ionic compound. it dissolves in water to give aqueous solution.
Solubility is the ability of an ionic compound t dissociate in a solution.
ionic
What type of solution forms when lithium- chloride dissolves in water?
A substance that dissolves in solution to conduct an electrical current is an "electrolyte" or, less commonly, an "ionogen".
the diffrent is when an ionic compound dissolves in water it breaks up into ions while a molecular compound breaks up into molecules.
yes, its called a salt water solution (saline)
No, they behave in a similar way. When an ionic compound (like NaCl) dissolves, its atoms separate and become free particles within the solution.
like dissolves like..water is polar so polar or ionic substances will dissolve in water
If a compound dissolves into water and allows for the conductance of electrical current its said to be ionic and an electrolyte. Sodium chloride (NaCl) or table salt exhibits this property. Sugar is a compound that will dissolve in water but not conduct current. Sugar is not an electrolyte or ionic; rather a covalent molecule.