Ionic compounds are not meatals: salts, acids, bases.
Their conductance of electricity in aqueous solutions prove that they are ionic in nature.
Electrolytes: acids, bases, and salts (ionic compounds) Nonelectrolytes: usually covalent compounds with the exception of acids. Ionic compounds : One of the ions has a positive charge (called a "cation") and the other has a negative charge ("anion") *Electrolytes can be strong or weak
Acids and Hydrides? Not 100% sure about Acids, i do know that Hydrides are right though.
Yes. In compounds such as salts of carboxylic acids or in pyridinium halides.
Ionic compounds are not meatals: salts, acids, bases.
For example, ionic compounds: inorganic acids, salts, bases; many organic compounds, etc.
Their conductance of electricity in aqueous solutions prove that they are ionic in nature.
Electrolytes: acids, bases, and salts (ionic compounds) Nonelectrolytes: usually covalent compounds with the exception of acids. Ionic compounds : One of the ions has a positive charge (called a "cation") and the other has a negative charge ("anion") *Electrolytes can be strong or weak
For example, ionic compounds: inorganic acids, salts, bases; many organic compounds, etc.
Salts are ionic compounds, products of reactions beween acids and bases.
Anything metallic can conduct electricity. Also molten ionic compounds and solutions of ionic compounds. Aqueous acids also conduct electricity.
Acids and Hydrides? Not 100% sure about Acids, i do know that Hydrides are right though.
Yes. In compounds such as salts of carboxylic acids or in pyridinium halides.
It is an Ionic compound (as far as i guess)
Ksp is only for ionic compounds that can produce a precipitate, thus acids and base can not produce a ppt when mixed together. acids and bases are always soluble.
Salts are the products of the reactions between acids and bases (neutralization reactions). Salts are compounds with ionic bond, containing an anion and a cation.