Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Solid sodium chloride is not electrically conductive.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte and is not an electrical conductor.
Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Yes, a sodium chloride solution in water is an electricity conductor.
yes
There are several properties that distinguish sucrose from sodium chloride. One is that sucrose melts at around 186ºC whereas sodium chloride melts at around 800ºC. Another property would be that sucrose is a non electrolyte (will not conduct a current when in solution) whereas sodium chloride is an electrolyte and it will conduct a current when in solution.
yes, the charges of the dissolved ions in solution allow for electrons to be transfered through water. Completely pure water actually is a decent insulator of electric current
Yes, Sodium hypochlorite is a fine ionic compound. It will pass an electric current.
In solid table salt (sodium chloride or NaCl), the atoms of sodium and chlorine are locked to each other in ionic bonds, and these molecules are, in turn, locked into a crystal matrix. There are no "free electrons" in this structure that are available to support the flow of electric current. That's why salt in its solid form won't conduct electricity. It's a different story when sodium chloride is in aqueous solution or is molten. In solution, salt molecules will dissociate. They will "decompose" into ions of sodium and chlorine, what are Na+ and Cl- as we write them in chemistry. These ions have mobility in the solution, and if we stick a pair of electrodes into a salt solution and hook up a battery, we can get current flow through the solution. The ions themselves will be the charge carriers, and salt water is a conductor or an electrolyte. If we melt sodium chloride, it will undergo thermal dissociation. The heat of fusion (standard enthalpy of fusion) is sufficient to again cause the molecules of salt to "decompose" into those ions we spoke of, and the ions will be mobile in the molten salt like they are when salt is in solution. Molten salt will conduct electricity.
In electricity current is conducted. The conduction is caused by a voltage and the amount of current conducted is determined by a resistance. This is in accordance to Ohm's law.
Being an ionic compound magnesium chloride is dissociated in solution.
This may be a trick question, electrolyis of a sodium chloride solution produces chlorine at the anode but does not produce sodium at the cathode. Electrolysis of molten sodium chloride does however produce sodium and chlorine.
A substance will conduct an electric current if it forms ions in solution. A solute that produces ions in solution is an Electrolyte. An Electrolytic Solution is a solution that conducts electricity.
Yes, aqueous sodium chloride solution is a good conductor of electricity. Since, it is an ionic salt, when dissolved in water it dissociates into ions and thus the free ions conduct electricity.
It is an electrolyte.
i don't believe it does
Sodium chloride in solution or melted is a good conductor of electricity; but sodium chloride doesn't produce electricity.
Sodium chloride is composed of positive sodium ions and negative chloride ions. When it is a solid these ions are arranged in a lattice and unable to move. When the solid is melted the ions become free to move and, as they are charged, they can carry an electric current. -adapted from Yahoo answers
This is an electrolyte.
it will get hot
There are several properties that distinguish sucrose from sodium chloride. One is that sucrose melts at around 186ºC whereas sodium chloride melts at around 800ºC. Another property would be that sucrose is a non electrolyte (will not conduct a current when in solution) whereas sodium chloride is an electrolyte and it will conduct a current when in solution.
There are several properties that distinguish sucrose from sodium chloride. One is that sucrose melts at around 186ºC whereas sodium chloride melts at around 800ºC. Another property would be that sucrose is a non electrolyte (will not conduct a current when in solution) whereas sodium chloride is an electrolyte and it will conduct a current when in solution.