Pure water is considered a non-electrolyte because it is PURE. That means there are no added minerals, no dissolved salts, and no particles of any kind, just water.
Seawater, then pure @ 4 degrees C.
No. Water is water.
Answer a. Pure Water is not a mixture - it is a compound. Seawater is a mixture of water and salts, air is a mixture of gases and brass is a mixture (an alloy) of copper and zinc metals.
No, for several reasons. It's too diffuse. It's "pure" water (and pure water is a lousy conductor).
When their is a lack of drinking water.
A solution of sugar (sucrose) in pure water
Sugar water.
Antifreeze is a nonelectrolyte because it does not dissociate into ions when dissolved in water.
electrolyte
C6H12O6 is a nonelectrolyte because it does not break apart into ions when dissolved in water.
A nonelectrolyte is not able to be dissociated in water.
B/c it barely dissolves in water
A nonelectrolyte solution is formed when a substance dissolves in water but does not dissociate into ions. Examples include sugar (sucrose), ethanol, and glycerol.
Yes, propane gas is a nonelectrolyte. When dissolved in water, propane does not dissociate into ions, so it does not conduct electricity.
NaBr is a salt because it has Na in it CuNo32 may be a nonelectrolyte NH3 is a base KOH is a base CaCl2 may be a nonelectrolyte hope that somewhat helps
examples are :- 1.glycerin 2.benzene 3.distilled water etc.
Sodium chloride is an electrolyte when is in a water solution or melted.