Sodium chloride as a solid is not conductive.
Water solution of NaCl contain the ions Na+ and Cl-, is an electrolyte and is conductive.
Sodium chloride conduct electricity only when is as an electrolyte: in water solution or melted.
Yes, sodium chloride (table salt) conducts electricity when it is dissolved in water. This is because it dissociates into ions (sodium and chloride ions) in solution, which are able to carry electrical charge and allow the flow of electricity.
Yes, a solution of potassium chloride and water will conduct electricity. When potassium chloride (an electrolyte) dissolves in water, it dissociates into potassium ions and chloride ions which can carry electric current.
Sodium Chloride solution (dissolved in water) conducts electricity, and molten Sodium Chloride conducts electricty, but dry crystal Sodium Chloride does not conduct electricity.
Yes, the solution of sodium chloride is conductive.
Salt (sodium chloride) dissociates into ions (sodium and chloride) in water, allowing it to conduct electricity. Vetsin (monosodium glutamate) likely contains ions that can also dissociate in water, enabling it to conduct electricity in a solution.
Yes, a saline solution is a conductor.
Yes, in water solution or when is melted.
Yes, potassium chloride is an electrolyte because it dissociates into potassium and chloride ions in solution, allowing it to conduct electricity. However, it conducts electricity only when it is dissolved in water or in a molten state, not as a solid.
Solid ammonium chloride does not conduct electricity because its ions are not free to move and carry charge. When dissolved in water, ammonium chloride dissociates into its ions (NH4+ and Cl-) which can move freely in the solution and conduct electricity.
A solution of potassium chloride in an ionization promotingsolvent such as water conducts electricity because the positive and negative ions in potassium chloride in such a solutionare separated from each other by a sufficient distance that they can move in opposite directions in a electric field imposed on the solution by two (or more) electrodes maintained at a potential difference by means external to the solution.
Aqueous sodium chloride contains dissociated ions which are free to move and conduct electricity. Dry sodium chloride does not conduct electricity because the ions are not free to move in a solid state.