No. Cyclohexane is non-polar and water is polar, and so they will not mix with each other.
Yes, since like dissolves like and cyclohexene and water are both polar, cyclohexene is miscible in water.
no, cause its not polar
No, they are IMmiscible
No
Yes, methanol miscible.
Solubility (miscibility when concerning two liquids) depends on the solvent and the solute being able to interact with each other through similar intermolecular forces. Water and ethanol can both participate in hydrogen bonding and therefore they are miscible. Cyclohexane is do not have any polar atoms or bonds and therefore can only interact through London dispersion forces, which is incompatible with water since the small size and polar nature of water precludes it from participating in London dispersion force interactions. Cyclohexane will be miscible in other liquids that share its properties, such as octane.
Methylbenzene, aka toluene, is not miscible in water. It is miscible in organic solvents such as hexane and acetone.
No, the polarity of water contrasts with and repels the nonpolar substane that is cyclohexane.
The density of cyclohexane is lower than that of water (0.779 g/mL vs. 1.0 g/mL respectively), so it will float on top of water.
water
Yes, methanol miscible.
They are miscible.
Yes, they are miscible.
yes, at STP, as the change in gibbs free energy is negaitve for all cases. however, the mixing does require heat input to stay isothermal, as heat is required to break the hydrogen bonding of ethanol by cyclohexane
yes
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
water is polar and the cyclohexane is not
Solubility (miscibility when concerning two liquids) depends on the solvent and the solute being able to interact with each other through similar intermolecular forces. Water and ethanol can both participate in hydrogen bonding and therefore they are miscible. Cyclohexane is do not have any polar atoms or bonds and therefore can only interact through London dispersion forces, which is incompatible with water since the small size and polar nature of water precludes it from participating in London dispersion force interactions. Cyclohexane will be miscible in other liquids that share its properties, such as octane.
Being miscible means that it can form a homogeneous solution when added with another liquid. Bromoform is immiscible with water. It is however, miscible with the chemical cyclohexane.
they are immiscible cyclohexane floats on water surface.
Cyclohexane doesn't form ions in water.