when bases are placed in water, the bases release hydroxyl ions.
those bases which are able to form hydrogen bond with H20 are water soluble base. Example: NaOH, alcohol, CH3NH2...
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A base soluble in water is called an Alkali.
bases that dissolve in water are called alkalis
For example hydroxides of alkali metals are very soluble in water.
Hydroxides of alkali metals are very soluble in water.
Alkali does not Stand for anything its a name given to those bases that dissolve in water. For example NaOH is a BASE that can dissolve in water so its an alkali another important thing is that all Alkali's are bases but all bases are NOT alkali's.
a basic oxide that dissolves in water is called an alkali
water
Fully saturated.
Aqueous. represented by an "aq" next to an element or in a compound.
Alkali does not Stand for anything its a name given to those bases that dissolve in water. For example NaOH is a BASE that can dissolve in water so its an alkali another important thing is that all Alkali's are bases but all bases are NOT alkali's.
something bases which can dissolve in water
A substance is 'insoluble in water' if it will not dissolve in water, although it may dissolve in another solvent.
a basic oxide that dissolves in water is called an alkali
oil does not dissolve at all in water.
It is a solvent liquid. For example, water is a solvent as it can dissolve sugar crystals (and many other things).
solvent
water
Fully saturated.
Water, alcohol, and others. The name for such liquids is solvent.
Water, alcohol, and others. The name for such liquids is solvent.
Substances that do not dissolve in water are called "insoluble" or "non-soluble." For water (a polar molecule), anything non-polar will not dissolve, including hexane, methane, ethane, propane, octane, oils, waxes, and plastics.