If it is infinitely diluted, then naturally the solute (HOH) is the conductor. Conductivity of pure water is about 5.5 · 10-6 S/m
No, sodium chloride is not a thermal conductivity. Thermal conductivity is a property that describes the ability of a material to conduct heat, while sodium chloride is a compound composed of sodium and chloride ions.
The thermal conductivity of sodium chloride is 6,5 W/m.K at 25 0K.Electrically sodium chloride is an insulator.
The thermal conductivity of sodium chloride is 6,5 W/m.K at 25 0K.Electrically sodium chloride is an insulator.
Solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.Sodium chloride in water solutions or molten sodium chloride are electrolytes.
Not positive, but fairly sure that solid sodium chloride is not a conductor. Molten sodium chloride is a good conductor.
The thermal conductivity of sodium chloride is 6,5 W/m.K at 25 0C.
The thermal conductivity of sodium chloride is 6,5 W/m.K at 25 0K.Electrically sodium chloride is an insulator.
Solid sodium chloride is neutral.
The solution being an electrolyte is electrically conductive.
Solid sodium chloride is not conductive; the water solution of NaCl (or wet NaCl) being an electrolyte is conductive.
Sodium chloride in liquid phase and sodium chloride in water solution are electrolytes, containing ions Na+ and Cl-.
Depends on the molarity. The following data for electrical conductivity are approximate, as measured by a simple conductivity probe in my chem 17 lab, and are given in units of micro Siemens or 10^-6 S: 0.1M NaCl solution = 90800 micro Siemens 0.003M NaCl solution = 530 micro Siemens