Salts are dissociated in ions (cations and anions):
Example:
NaCl------------------------Na+ + Cl-
They don't dissolve (or more properly, dissociate) completely in water, only partially. Acids or bases that dissociate completely are called strong acids or bases.
electrolytes
A. is the answer because electrolytes are salts that dissolved in water and dissociate into charged particles called ions.
Ionic compounds, such as table salt (sodium chloride), dissolve in water and dissociate into ions. In the case of sodium chloride, it breaks into positively charged sodium ions (Na+) and negatively charged chloride ions (Cl-) in water. These ions are free to move and conduct electricity, making the solution an electrolyte.
something that can be dissolve in liquid is called soluble. if the solute can dissolve in the solvent, it is called a solution
Electrolytes.
something that can be dissolve in liquid is called soluble. if the solute can dissolve in the solvent, it is called a solution
Ionic compounds that dissolve in water are called electrolytes. When dissolved in water, these compounds dissociate into ions, which allows them to conduct electricity. Examples of common electrolytes include salts like sodium chloride (NaCl) and potassium nitrate (KNO3).
Bad stress is technically called "Distress". Good stress is technically called "Eustress".
Substances that do not dissolve are insolubles, because they are not soluble they do not dissolve.
Yes, that's correct. Molecular compounds that ionize completely in water are called strong electrolytes, while those that do not ionize completely are called weak electrolytes. Strong electrolytes dissociate completely into ions when dissolved, whereas weak electrolytes only partially dissociate.
No. Some substances dissolve perfectly and are called homogeneous. Others do not and are called Heterogeneous.