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If your talking about state, like as in states of matter, then electricity has none. Electricity is not matter, so it can not have a state.
In the solid state, substances that can conduct electricity include metals and semiconductors. Metals have a sea of delocalized electrons that can move freely and carry electrical charge. Semiconductors have a small energy band gap that allows some electrons to move and conduct electricity.
Ag (silver) because it is a metal and metals conduct electricity no matter in solid or liquid phase.
Heat conduction occurs when one atom bumps into another atom, transferring heat energy.Electrical conduction occurs through the movement of charge carriers, which in a solid are usually electrons or holes.
There are now five states of matter which are the BE Condensate, solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas.
If your talking about state, like as in states of matter, then electricity has none. Electricity is not matter, so it can not have a state.
because they are tight together
In the solid state, substances that can conduct electricity include metals and semiconductors. Metals have a sea of delocalized electrons that can move freely and carry electrical charge. Semiconductors have a small energy band gap that allows some electrons to move and conduct electricity.
Yes, copper chloride does conduct electricity when dissolved in water or in molten form. In these states, the copper ions and chloride ions are free to move and carry electric charge.
Yes, sodium conducts electricity. It is a metal that can easily lose its outer electron to form a positive ion, allowing it to conduct electricity in both solid and molten states.
Solids, liquids, gases, and plasmas are all states of matter. Hopefully that helps.
No, sugar in solid form does not conduct electricity because it does not contain free ions or electrons to facilitate the flow of electric current. Sugar is a non-electrolyte, meaning it does not ionize in water to produce charged particles needed for conducting electricity.
Not all but many of the substances conduct electricity in the molten form. Those substances which are insulators do not conduct electricity in any state, but subs. like ionic compounds start conducting electricity in the molten state.
Pressure changes have no effect on the entropy of substances in the solid or liquid states. Entropy is primarily affected by temperature changes and phase transitions rather than pressure variations in these states.
Ag (silver) because it is a metal and metals conduct electricity no matter in solid or liquid phase.
Bromine, as the element is called on its own is a nonmetal, and is a poor conductor of electricity. Bromide salts conduct electricity if dissolved in water or molten, but not in their normal solid states.
An ionic compound can conduct electricity when it is in a molten state or when it is dissolved in water, allowing the ions to move freely and carry an electric charge. In these states, the ions are able to flow and transmit electric current.