Yes. HClO4 is a strong acid and therefore a strong electrolyte.
Yes, HCl is a strong electrolyte.
Lithium chloride is an electrolyte.
No, by itself it is not an electrolyte. HCl is hydrogen chloride and exists as a gas. Once dissolved it water, it become hydrochloric acid, a strong electrolyte.
Yes. HCl is a strong electrolyte.
H+ and Cl- Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a strong electrolyte.
Propane, as it cannot from ions in solution
water is an weak electrolyte because of strong hydrogen bonding between water molecules
No, by itself it is not an electrolyte. HCl is hydrogen chloride and exists as a gas. Once dissolved it water, it become hydrochloric acid, a strong electrolyte.
Yes it is
Yes. HCl is a strong electrolyte.
Yes it can act as an electrolyte.
yes, hydrochloric acid is a strong acid, so it is a strong electrolyte.
H+ and Cl- Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a strong electrolyte.
Yes it does! Examples are HCl and NaOH.
A common ion will reduce the solubility of an electrolyte with an identical ion. The common ion will hence also reduce the dissolution rate of the electrolyte. For example, the solubility of a HCl salt of a weak organic base may be reduced in a HCl solution.
Electrolytes are liquids which will conduct an electrical current. Pure H2O, or water, is not an electrolyte. However, a large number of salts can be dissolved in water, which will cause it to become an electrolyte.
when any ionizable cpmpound is dissolved in water it becomes an electrolytic solution as NaCl or HCl in water....
Propane, as it cannot from ions in solution
Hydrochloric acid is a strong acidic solution because HCl is completely dissociated, the loss of the proton is easy.