Electrolytes and Nonelectrolytes in Water
This simulation shows how salts, acids, bases, and molecular substances behave in water. Charged particles that can move through the solution allow electricity to flow.
Positive ion
Negative ion
Neutral molecule
Water molecule
More dissolved particles can increase conductivity if charged particles are produced.
Type:
Strong electrolyte
Behavior:
Dissociates into many moving ions.
Bulb:
Bright
High conductivity
Particle-level idea:
Strong electrolytes separate into many positive and negative ions. These moving charged particles carry electric charge through the solution.
Dissociation / ionization model
NaCl(s) → Na+(aq) + Cl−(aq)
How charge moves
The solution conducts electricity when positive and negative ions move through the water. More moving ions means greater conductivity.
Key comparison
Electrolytes form ions in water. Nonelectrolytes dissolve as neutral molecules, so they do not provide moving charged particles to conduct electricity.
