Calcium Hydroxide cannot conduct electricity when it is in solid state but it can conduct electricity in aqueous solution state or molten state. This is because it is an ionic compound. Ionic compounds are made of charged ions which are held tightly in solid state but become mobile in molten or aqueous solution state. The movement of these mobile ions between electrodes helps in conducting electricity.
Calcium oxide is an electrical insulator because it is an ionic compound and does not have delocalized electrons due to its ionic lattice structure. But in a molten state or dissolved in water it can conduct and current can flow through it.
when it is molten or dissolved in water state
when CaO melts at a very high temperature (high melting point)
Yes
francium ceasium Potassium Sodium Lithium These metals could react with calcium nitrate in a displacement reaction as they are more reactive. e.g. pottasium + calcium nitrate -> calcium + pottasium nitrate.
Calcium Chlorite (used in domestic Swimming Pools)
Calcium can conduct electricity in both its solid and molten state because it has mobile charge carriers. In its solid state, calcium atoms are arranged in a lattice structure and the movement of electrons within the lattice allows for electrical conductivity. In its molten state, the calcium ions are free to move throughout the liquid, facilitating the flow of electric current.
Yes, calcium nitrate is an ionic crystalline salt of calcium normally encountered as the tetrahydrate, Ca(NO3)2.4H2O
Calcium bromide is an ionic solid, in the solid state it does not conduct electricity. Solutions do conduct, as does the melt.
yes
Yes
In solid form calcium chloride doesn't conduct electricity, but dissolved in water it conducts electricity quite well.
no
Calcium Carbonate is insoluble in water, however calcium carbonate itself is an ionic compound and ionic bonds do conduct electricity.
no
yes
yes
Chalk, which is calcium carbonate, does not conduct electricity. This is due to the electrons being held tightly by the ions, which means they are not free to travel and conduct electricity.
The solid calcium chloride is not an electrolyte.
If you mean will aqueous sodium nitrate conduct electricity the answer is yes.