A salt, acid or base which can be dissociated in ions in an aqueous solution.
Sugar is an example of a non-electrolyte when it is not dissolved in water.
No, an aqueous solution of urea does not conduct electricity because urea molecules do not dissociate into ions in water. Therefore, it is a non-electrolyte solution.
No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-). Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-). Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
Benzene, being a covalent compound is not soluble in water. So a solution of benzene in water is absurd. However in answering your question I would say that, as benzene is not soluble in water it does not function as an electrolyte. Some more improvement would be that benzene itself is not an electrolyte.
This solution is not an electrolyte.
Sugar is an example of a non-electrolyte when it is not dissolved in water.
It is not an electrolyte as such. It needs to have salts in it that conduct electricity in order to be a complete electrolyte.
This compound is an electrolyte.
No, an aqueous solution of urea does not conduct electricity because urea molecules do not dissociate into ions in water. Therefore, it is a non-electrolyte solution.
sodium chloride (in aqueous solution or in molten state) is an electrolyte.
The ions of the solution composing the electrolyte. In aqueous solution, salts are completely dissociated into their ions, and the ability of the ions to flow in the solution allows them to carry charge and serve as an electrolyte.
No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-). Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
No, it is considered an electrolyte because charged ions are present, dissolved in solution (H3O+ and HSO4-). Any acidic aqueous solution is an electrolyte due to the presence of H3O+ in solution (similarly, any basic aqueous solution is also).
ionically dissociate into two atoms
Benzene, being a covalent compound is not soluble in water. So a solution of benzene in water is absurd. However in answering your question I would say that, as benzene is not soluble in water it does not function as an electrolyte. Some more improvement would be that benzene itself is not an electrolyte.
Fe2O3 is not an electrolyte because it is an ionic compound composed of iron (III) oxide, which does not produce ions in an aqueous solution. Therefore, it does not dissociate into ions and cannot conduct electricity in solution.