In the past few days I've realized I have a bit of trouble distinguishing between solubility and electrolytic behavior. I have a test tomorrow, and I wanted to see if I can clear this up; the teacher wasn't very helpful the past few days I asked for clarification.
When you say something is soluble in water (denoted by (aq), right?) does that mean that it dissolves into its representative particles? Like, if you had a solid soluble molecular compound it would just separate into molecules, right? (This is just to make sure I know things correctly). If something is soluble, does it necessarily mean it will dissociate or ionize in solution? What I don't understand is what if you have a compound like BeCo3 that is insoluble in water, but it is an ionic compound, and therefore a strong electrolyte, shouldn't it completely ionize in solution? But since it's insoluble, can't it not ionize? Will it the fact that it's insoluble negate the fact that it's also a strong electrolyte? Oy, I'm so confused. If anyone could explain and give me some solace, it'd be wonderful. Thanks in advance!