Salt water- the ions are not held in the crystal lattice they are free to move.
Yes, sodium chloride is a solid at room temperature.
Solid. Table salt, which is definitely a solid at room temperature, is sodium chloride.
The word equation for breaking sodium chloride into its elements is: Sodium chloride (s) → Sodium (s) + Chlorine (g). This represents the decomposition of sodium chloride into sodium metal and chlorine gas.
The products of the reaction are solid silver chloride and aqueous sodium nitrate. I'm Travin Sanders and I'm a scientist. I'm Sure of this answer. Travin Sanders of Davis Station
Naphthalene can be separated from sodium chloride by sublimation. When the mixture is heated, naphthalene will sublimate, turning from a solid to a gas, and can be collected separately from the solid sodium chloride.
Solid pure sodium chloride is not conductive.
Sodium chloride is not electrically conductive.
Not as a solid, but dissolve it in water and the ions help electricity conduct through the saltwater. Totally pure water will hardly conduct electricity. The impurities in the water are what allows current to flow.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte when: - is dissolved and dissociated in water - dissociated after melting
Solid sodium chloride is not conductive; the water solution of NaCl (or wet NaCl) being an electrolyte is conductive.
Solid sodium chloride is neutral and nonconductive.In solution sodium chloride is dissolved and dissociated and become conductive; the same in the melt.
In water sodium chloride is dissociated and the solution become an electrolyte, electrically conductive. The solid NaCl is not an electrolyte.
In a solid sodium chloride ions are not free; in solution or melting sodium chloride become an electrolyte, with free ions.
Yes NaCl can conduct the electricity........but i am not sure about Glucose
Sodium chloride as a solid is not conductive.Water solution of NaCl contain the ions Na+ and Cl-, is an electrolyte and is conductive.
Yes, an electric current can be conducted by a solution of sodium chloride because it dissociates into ions in water. The positively charged sodium ions (Na+) and negatively charged chloride ions (Cl-) allow the flow of electricity through the solution.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a solid.