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The water is called solvent, the compounds to be dissolved are solutes
Any other compounds dissolved in water may be properly called a "solute", and when the compounds are ionic they may also be called "electrolytes."
This is called a double replacement reaction. An example might be something like this ...NaCl(aq) + AgNO3(aq) ---> NaNO3(aq) + AgCl(s)
Water is a compound because it dissolved something important called matter ............ Matter is an alloy baby lobot nmo uie
Ionic
compounds that release ions when they dissolve in water ar called acids.
An acid-base reaction.
Substances that form ions when dissolved in water are electrolytes.
Electrolytes are substances that consist of charged particles called ions. When electrolytes are dissolved in water (or other polar solvents) they ionize into positive (cation) and negative (anion) ions. In this experiment, you will explore what types of compounds can become electrolytes, what determines electrolyte strength, and how electrolytes are involved in the conduction of electricity.
These substances are ionic compounds forming electrolytes by dissociation in water.
If the compounds or atoms are separated into different ions while on a high temprature, the process can be called ionization. During the process they either gain a negative or a positive charge.
Arrhenius bases produce OH- ions by definition when dissolved in water. A Bronsted - Lowry base can produce OH- ions, but only has to produce a proton accepting group by definition. A Lewis base is defined as an electron donating group, which hydroxide ion is. So, basic compounds do produce OH- ions when dissolved in water, but not in all cases.