Chemistry, asked by kr5490284, 9 months ago

A salt behave like electrolytes in its. (a)Molten state. (b) Aqueous sloutio. state. (c) Solid state. (d) Both in molten and aqueous solution state​

Answers

Answered by ridergirl
7

Answer:

Explanation:

When some substances are dissolved in water, they undergo either a physical or a chemical change that yields ions in solution. These substances constitute an important class of compounds called electrolytes. Substances that do not yield ions when dissolved are called nonelectrolytes. If the physical or chemical process that generates the ions is essentially 100% efficient (all of the dissolved compound yields ions), then the substance is known as a strong electrolyte. If only a relatively small fraction of the dissolved substance undergoes the ion-producing process, it is called a weak electrolyte.

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