yes it does. Almost every liquid that are solutions of acid, base or salt, conducts electricity.
Acetone is not conductive and does not dissolve in water because it is a nonpolar solvent. When acetone is dissolved in water, it does not conduct electricity because it does not ionize to form charged particles in water.
Yes, water can conduct electricity because it contains ions that allow electric current to flow through it.
No, stearic acid does not conduct electricity when dissolved in water since it is a non-electrolyte. It does not dissociate into ions in water, which are required for conducting electricity.
Ionic compounds generally dissolve in water dissociating to give ions that are free to move and conduct electricity. Molten ionic compounds also have free ions and conduct electricity. Ionic compounds generally do not conduct electricity in the solid form.
While it does conduct electricity, lime water is not a good idea for the same reason electronics break when they get wet, because there is no way to guide the electrical currents that get sent through it. In an electronic that got wet, the electrical currents are flowing through the water and going to the wrong places, probably electrocuting and burning whatever the current goes too, breaking it.
Yes.
It contains citric acid and other salts which are conductors of electricity in the presence of water which is there of course.
It contains citric acid and other salts which are conductors of electricity in the presence of water which is there of course.
It contains citric acid and other salts which are conductors of electricity in the presence of water which is there of course.
A lime, specifically lime juice, can conduct electricity due to the presence of ions in its acidic solution. When lime juice is dissolved in water, it dissociates into positively charged hydrogen ions (H⁺) and negatively charged ions, allowing it to facilitate the flow of electric current. This ionization is what makes lime, like other acidic solutions, a conductor of electricity.
No, pure water does not conduct electricity because there are no other solutions present. For the water to conduct electricity, there has to be an electrolyte. Salt water, Tap water, and sugar water do conduct a little electricity because they contain soluble ionic compounds.
An ionic compound dissolved in water is an electrolyte and can conduct electricity.
A water solution containing ions conduct electricity.
It doesn't conduct electricity if it is pure water as there are no flowing ions. But in un-pure water electricity can be conducted.
Yes, all impure solutions of water containing salts are conductive to some degree, in addition many juices are acidic, and many acidic water solutions are conductive.
Water itself does not conduct electricity, but it can become a conductor if it contains impurities or ions. This is why pure water does not conduct electricity, but tap water or saltwater can.
pure water does not conduct electricity. the presence of electrolytes in the water is what conducts electricity. the equation for the conductivity (ability to conduct electricity) Conductance = 1/ resistance