Any ionized chemical will cause water to become electrically conductive. In general, salts are the best example.
epsom salt is also known as magnesium sulfate, which is made up of a cation and a polyatomic anion which can dissociate in water, therefore, yes, it is an electrolyte
Anything that hydrogen bond with the water molecules makes it water soluble, such as alcohols. Ethanol is water-soluble because its hydroxyl group bonds with the water molecules. It is not an electrolyte because it does not form ions when in a solution. Electrolytes form ions when they are in water. For example, sodium chloride is an electrolyte because it dissociates into its cation and anion when in water.
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Salt added to water form a solution, an electrolyte.
No. Although an electrolyte must be at least somewhat soluble in water, in pure form an electrolyte may be a solid (such as sodium chloride), liquid (such as sulfuric acid), or gas (such as hydrogen chloride).
epsom salt is also known as magnesium sulfate, which is made up of a cation and a polyatomic anion which can dissociate in water, therefore, yes, it is an electrolyte
Oxide is the ionized form of oxygen
If it's molten or dissolved in water, it's an electrolyte.
Anything that hydrogen bond with the water molecules makes it water soluble, such as alcohols. Ethanol is water-soluble because its hydroxyl group bonds with the water molecules. It is not an electrolyte because it does not form ions when in a solution. Electrolytes form ions when they are in water. For example, sodium chloride is an electrolyte because it dissociates into its cation and anion when in water.
I think it might dissolve in water or somthing else
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
No, sand and water mixed together don't make a solution
NaCl is an ionic compound. In water it dissolves completely forming ions. Since it dissolves completely forming Na^+ and Cl^- ions it is classified as a strong electrolyte.Strong electrolytes are completely dissociated into ions in solution and conduct an electrical current strongly.Weak electrolytes are only partly dissociated (examples are molecules like acetic acid which forms a weak electrolyte).Nonelectrolytes do not form ions at all and do not conduct electricity in their solutions.
The two minerals dissolve in hot water to form solutions are sugar and salt. They will form a homogeneous solution as they completely dissolve in water.
The two minerals dissolve in hot water to form solutions are sugar and salt. They will form a homogeneous solution as they completely dissolve in water.
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Carbons ionized form makes body fluids acidic