The electrolyte is usually 1.835 times heavier than water.
8 Times Heavier
how does a liquid have a electrolyte in it and some dont
O = 16.00 a.m.u (atomic mass units) Mg = 24.31 a.m.u So, relatively speaking it is 1.519 times heavier
Sugar is a non-electrolyte. This means when dissolved in water, it will not dissociate into ions. Hence there will be only ONE particle when sugar is added to water.
No sugar is not an electrolyte- it is not because it does not carry the charges and does not have any electricity in it, it remains whole and does not break down like an electrolyte is supposed to. An example of an electrolyte is salt- an Aquous solution of NaCl (Sodium Chloride).
8 Times Heavier
It's 4 times heavier.
about 4 times
2.5 times
48
100 times
about how many times heavier is a penny than a dollar bill in ounces
no, the Earth is many times heavier
By weighing the thing or multiplying the thing.
99000 times lighter than earth.
how does a liquid have a electrolyte in it and some dont
It is inappropriate to be talking about "lighter" or heavier" with regard to liters and centiliters (or milliliters or deciliters, etc.) Why? Because the liter (and its fractional parts) is a unit of volume or capacity, not weight. You may say that a liter is 100 times greater in volume than a centiliter. You could say that a liter is ten times greater in volume than a deciliter. You could also say that a deciliter is ten times greater in volume than a centiliter. But one is not necessarily heavier or lighter than another. Unless, of course, you have a liter and centiliter of the same substance! A liter of water, for example, will be 100 times heavier than a centiliter of water -- as long as both are at identical temperatures. (Water at 4 degrees Celsius is denser than water at higher and lower temperatures, so a liter of water at 4 degrees C will weigh more than 100 times a centiliter of water at higher or lower temps.)