Yes.
Sodium chloride may form aqueous solutions.
The types of solution are liquid(aqeous), solid, and gaseous.
An aqueous solution of a binary compound conducts electricity because the compound dissociates into ions in water. These free ions are able to carry electric charge and facilitate the flow of current. It is the presence of these mobile charged particles that allows the solution to conduct electricity.
Molten sodium chloride: sodium and chlorine. Aqeous solution of NaCl: sodium hydroxide and hydrogen.
All Lente preparations have the same aqeous solution. It contains glycerin as a cosolvent and stabilizer, sodium acetate as a buffer, sodium chloride for tonicity, and methylparaben as a preservative.
one simple answer is that whan NaCl is solid the ions Na+ and Cl- are not free to move and conduct the electricity. when in a aqeous solution and as a liquid the ions are free to move and the electricity can be conducted. hope this helps
An aqueous solution is a solution in which water is the solvent. Substances can dissolve in water to form an aqueous solution due to the polarity of water molecules. Common examples include salt dissolved in water and sugar dissolved in water.
Silver nitrate is a solid at room temperature. It dissolves in water to form a clear, colorless solution known as silver nitrate solution.
=-37.8 kj
from colourless(solution) to brown(solution)
aqeous
No. pH is for aqeous solutions.