Soluble lanthanides salts are dissociated in water.
They are soluble substances, which would include polar substances and ionic compounds.
Any compound which can disassociate into ions in solution is an electrolyte. These are most commonly water soluble salts, acids, and bases.
Salts dissociate because they are already ionized.Acids and weak bases ionize in water.KOH is a strong baseKCl is a saltLiCl is a saltHCl will ionize in water.
It completely dissociates in water.
The _____________ of an acid and a base is determined by how completely they dissociate in water. strength
Only soluble salts are dissociated in water.
electrolytes
They are soluble substances, which would include polar substances and ionic compounds.
Any compound which can disassociate into ions in solution is an electrolyte. These are most commonly water soluble salts, acids, and bases.
Salts dissociate because they are already ionized.Acids and weak bases ionize in water.KOH is a strong baseKCl is a saltLiCl is a saltHCl will ionize in water.
It completely dissociates in water.
The _____________ of an acid and a base is determined by how completely they dissociate in water. strength
Yes it does dissociate, and dissolve completely in water, as KBr is an ionic salt.
when an addition compound is dissolve in water or organic solvent if it does not dissociate and does not give its constituent ions and does not lose its identity such addition compound is known as complex salts or complex compounds
The potassium salts sulphate, phosphate, and bicarbonates all dissociate when dissolved in water, making the resulting solution capable of conducting electricity.
Ionic compounds dissociate when they dissolve in water.
This depends on the kind of dissociation: Salts, many acids and bases are electrolytes when dissociating in ION's. On the contrary some dissociating molecules are non-electrolytes. By example hydrogen peroxide, dissolved in water, dissociates into two new non-ionic compounds (water and oxygen) so it is a non-electrolyte. However most non-electrolytes do NOT dissociate when dissolved in water, example sugar.