Yes
Yes, barium nitrate is a strong electrolyte. When dissolved in water, it dissociates into ions, allowing it to conduct electricity effectively.
Barium Dichloride is NOT correct. The name is Barium Chloride it is a binary ionic compound.
Aluminum chloride is a strong electrolyte because it completely dissociates into its ions when dissolved in water, producing a high concentration of ions in solution that can conduct electricity efficiently.
The formula name of a hydrate barium chloride and water is : BaCI2.2H2O
Since barium sulfate and barium chloride have a 1:1 molar ratio, you would need the same amount of barium chloride as barium sulfate, so 100 grams.
Yes, barium dichloride (BaCl2) is a strong electrolyte. When dissolved in water, it dissociates completely into barium ions (Ba2+) and chloride ions (Cl-), making it a good conductor of electricity.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Strong.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte only in solution or as melted, when is completely dissociated in ions.
Yes, because acetic acid is a weak acid (therefore it is a weak electrolyte), but NaCl is a salt that ionizes completely. In general salts and strong acids and bases are strong electrolyte, while weak acids and weak bases are weak electrolytes.
Yes, barium chloride (BaCl2) is soluble in water.
Both potassium chloride and calcium chloride are strong electrolytes when dissolved in water or when molten.
When barium hydroxide is added to ammonium chloride, barium chloride and ammonium hydroxide are formed. Barium chloride is an insoluble white precipitate, while ammonium hydroxide is a colorless gas that can be detected by its strong smell.
Yes, barium nitrate is a strong electrolyte. When dissolved in water, it dissociates into ions, allowing it to conduct electricity effectively.
In water solution or in molten state NaCl is a strong electrolyte.
The anion of barium chloride is chloride (Cl-). Barium chloride is an ionic compound composed of the cation barium (Ba2+) and the anion chloride.
Barium Dichloride is NOT correct. The name is Barium Chloride it is a binary ionic compound.