Wax is not an electrolyte.
Ammonium sulfate is a strong electrolyte. It dissociates completely into ions when dissolved in water, leading to a high conductivity of the solution.
1 M NaCl is an electrolyte because when dissolved in water, it dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions, which can conduct electricity.
Yes, calcium bromide is an electrolyte. When dissolved in water, it dissociates into calcium ions (Ca²⁺) and bromide ions (Br⁻) which can conduct electricity.
Calcium nitrate is a strong electrolyte. Ca(NO3)2 completely dissociates in an aqueous solution to form Ca2+ cations and NO3- anions; classifying it as a strong electrolyte. The higher the ion concentration in a solution, the higher the conductivity of the solution, and thus, the stronger the electrolyte (strong electrolyte = any solution with a conductivity above 1.00 mS).
Methyl alcohol by itself is not an electrolyte. By definition, an electrolyte is something containing free ions. If you took methyl alcohol and dissolved a salt in it, the resulting solution would indeed by an electrolyte solution. However, methyl alcohol by itself is not an electrolyte.
Molten wax is a non-electrolyte. This means it does not dissociate into ions when melted and therefore does not conduct electricity.
No, paraffin is not an electrolyte. Paraffin is a type of wax made from saturated hydrocarbons and does not conduct electricity like electrolytes do.
It is an electrolyte
Its a non electrolyte.
A strong electrolyte completely dissociates into ions in solution, a weak electrolyte partially dissociates, and a non-electrolyte does not dissociate at all.
Yes, it is an electrolyte.
No, It is a non-electrolyte,
Non ionic, non electrolyte
A electrolyte analyzer is a piece of laboratory equipment that checks electrolyte levels.
HF is considered a weak electrolyte because it partially dissociates into ions in solution, producing H+ and F- ions.
Neither, it's a non-electrolyte.
Which electrolyte?