The water is called solvent, the compounds to be dissolved are solutes
Ionic compounds conduct electricity when dissolved. Sodium chloride is an example
Water is a polar solvent and NaCl is an ionic compound.
The electrical conductivity of different materials is affected differently when dissolved in water. For example, anhydrous Sodium Chloride changes from a non-conductor to a one when dissolved.
Many common salts are covalently bound when together but dissolve into constituent ions when dissolved in water. Two examples are sodium chloride and calcium chloride.
Sea water is mostly water and sodium chloride. However, other compounds that are present include potassium chloride, calcium carbonate, dissolved carbon dioxide, oxygen, etc..
Soluble ionic compounds are excellent conductors of electricity when dissolved in water - such as sodium chloride (common salt)
Soluble ionic compounds are excellent conductors of electricity when dissolved in water - such as sodium chloride (common salt)
Commonly sodium chloride is not dissolved in organic compounds.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; in water NaCl is dissolved and dissociated in ions.Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; sodium chloride is dissolved and dissociated in water.
This is difficult to answer as salts in solution recombine with each other forming other salts.For example if you dissolved the two salts, sodium chloride and potassium iodide in water the solution would contain all of these compounds:watersodium chloridepotassium iodidesodium iodidepotassium chlorideIf only one salt was dissolved the number of compounds is always just two: water and that salt. But the more salts dissolved the much more ways they can recombine in solution to produce additional compounds.
Sodium chloride when dissolved in water forms an electrolyte that conducts electricity.
The sodium chloride solution of sodium chloride in water is homogeneous.