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All metals do. Silver is one of the best conductors - better than copper in fact.
Yes a silver coin can conduct electricity, Silver is one of the most commonly used to conduct electricity. Yes, silver is a very good conductor of electricity
No. Covalent substances do not conduct electricity in solid or liquid state.
No
No solid iodine does not conduct electricity.
All metals do. Silver is one of the best conductors - better than copper in fact.
Ag (silver) because it is a metal and metals conduct electricity no matter in solid or liquid phase.
Calcium bromide is an ionic solid, in the solid state it does not conduct electricity. Solutions do conduct, as does the melt.
Yes a silver coin can conduct electricity, Silver is one of the most commonly used to conduct electricity. Yes, silver is a very good conductor of electricity
no.
No. Covalent substances do not conduct electricity in solid or liquid state.
No
network solid
No solid iodine does not conduct electricity.
Solid sodium chloride doesn't conduct electricity.
Do_ionic_compounds_conduct_electricitycompounds conduct electricity when they are either dissolved in water of they are molten. If they remain a solid then they will not conduct electricity
solid nacl although contains ions and is an electrolyte does not conduct electricity because it does not have free valency electrons to move and thus the e- are bounded and this is the reason it does not conduct electricity