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No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
Also a taste of sugar !
Because although sugar dissolves in water, it does not produce ions in solution. Electric current travels through solution by hopping from cation to cation and since sugar produces no cations (or ions of any sort) in solution, the current cannot travel through the solution. Therefore, the solution as a whole does not conduct electricity
Sweet water. Saturated or unsaturated solution, depending on the amount of sugar dissolved in the water.
The dissolved substance in a solution is called solute.
Yes, it will conduct electric current much better than plain water. The sugar molecules in water form a clear solution by ionization facilitating the path of electrons of electric current.
Aluminium foil and potassium hydroxide in water solution are conductors.
Answer: A sugar solution does not conduct electricity because it does not contain ions. Sugar is not an electrolyte -- a substance which ionizes when dissolved in water.Answer: Sugar, as a non-electrolyte substance, does not produce ions when dissolved in water. A solution of sugar contains molecules of sucrose, but no ions. The absence of ions in a sugar aqueous solution makes it a non electricity conductor fluid.
Starch is an chain of sugar molecules, and the chain separates to its individual sugars when dissolved. Because sugars are made of C, H, and O, there are no metals and no ionic bonds in the molecule, so it does not conduct electricity when dissolved in water.
That depends on the kind of polution. If it is polution with (for instance) pure sand or sugar it does not conduct electricity. These kinds of polution do not decompose when dissolved. If the polution consists of salts that are dissolved in the water, than it certainly does conduct electricity. This comes from the fact that the dissolved salt decomposes in positive and negative ions. If an electric current is plave inside the basin, these ions will travel to the opposite electric pole. This movement of charged particles is an electric current. It is hard to say if the current travelling through poluted water is dangerous, or not. This depends of course on the strength of the current as well as the concentration of the polution.
An insulator is the general term for things that do not conduct electricity. Rubber is a good example. Glass, paper and teflon are also other good examples of insulators. It is too broad to point out a specific type. I would have been inclined to say a polymer, (i.e. plastics) but conducting polymers have very popular use as conductors.
Non-electrolyte. Sugar as a solid or dissolved in water does not conduct electricity (because there are no ions.)
KOH is an ionic substance. The bond between the K and the polyatomic ion hydroxide (OH) is formed by the transfer of electrons. In solution ions (charged atoms) will form. The ions facilitate the conduction of electricity.
Sugar Is dissolved in alcohol
When sugar is dissolved in water, water is called a SOLVENT
The solute.
No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.