This compound must be dissociated.
No: A purely covalently bonded compound does not conduct electricity even when molten, because a molecule of such a compound can not spontaneously separate into entities of opposite electrical charge. Such entities are required for electrical conductance through any pure chemical substance except a metal.
This compound is an electrolyte.
Cyclohexane has no charge. It is a compound, not an ion.
The charge is +3
BaS or Barium sulfide is the ionic compound. Ba has a charge of 2+ and S has a charge of 2- so when you combine them, they produce the neutral ionic compound BaS.
No: A purely covalently bonded compound does not conduct electricity even when molten, because a molecule of such a compound can not spontaneously separate into entities of opposite electrical charge. Such entities are required for electrical conductance through any pure chemical substance except a metal.
An ionic compound can conduct electricity when it is in solution or melted.
An ionic compound can conduct electricity when it is in solution or melted.
In aqueous form, the ionic compounds dissolve into there separate ions, and the charge can be transferred between the ions
Silver chloride. (The compound is ionic. No charges required, silver is almost always a +1 charge.) Hope it helps.
Because there is no charge separation (or free ions) to conduct charge.