yes, as a matter of fact, because the moleculed are condensed in with the acids
All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
All cooking salts are salty, not all salts are. Gipsum is a salt, but has no discernable taste at all. It is so bland that it is used as a filler and bulker in some food items, and its natural fire resistant properties make it perfect for drywall.
No. Not the metal itself but some of its salts and compounds are.
it is dissolved in water
In Epsom, UK.
Many salts are electrolytes but not all; also exist electrolytes which are not salts.
Most salt dissolve in water, then they're electrolytes by forming ions in solution.
Electrolytes are the solutions of salts, acids and bases and semen has numerous electrolytes. They include both acids and salts.
Because the soluble salts are dissociated in water solutions forming ions.
Electrolytes are easier for the body to absorb for nutritional value than salts. Essentially, salts are just salts, while electrolytes are salts plus more, such as potassium.
Many salts in solution or molten are electrolytes.
Because not only salts can be dissociated in ions.
Compounds which are not ionic are commonly not electrolytes. An ionic compound is a compound composed of a metal and a nonmetal, such as NaCl or AgI. Compounds with different compositions are not electrolytes.
An electrolyte is a substance that breaks up into ions when dissolved in water or any ionizing solvent. It is classified into three, gel electrolytes, solid ceramic electrolytes and dry polymer electrolytes.
They remain electrolytes until they are not thermally decomposed in other compounds.
The word electrolytes is a scientific term for salts.
The word electrolytes is a scientific term for salts.