Asked by qp
Nonelectrolytes fail to ionize or dissociate in water because
they are very weakly bonded to each other.
they are very strongly bonded to each other.
the water molecules keep them together by hydration.
they are forced together by the repulsion of water molecules.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
They are very strongly bonded to each other.
Reason: nonelectrolytes are typically covalent molecules that do not break up into ions in water, so they remain intact instead of dissociating to give charged particles.
Reason: nonelectrolytes are typically covalent molecules that do not break up into ions in water, so they remain intact instead of dissociating to give charged particles.
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