Yes, they do.
Sorry, the question in incomplete there are no suggested test substances. However; polar covalent compounds are very soluble in water.
only if it is at the right temperature and im sure it would be what it is not at what it should be at the right temperature when it should be wrong so basicaly you agree to disagree.... what im saying is NO!
No chemical reaction between water and sodium carbonate, only solving of the sodium carbonate in water.
Water molecule is polar covalent, but has a negligible ionic behavior.
If you mix sodium carbonate and water, you would observe that the sodium carbonate dissolves in the water. This is because sodium carbonate is highly soluble in water. The solution may also become slightly warm due to the dissolution process.
Sodium chloride is polar.
Sorry, the question in incomplete there are no suggested test substances. However; polar covalent compounds are very soluble in water.
only if it is at the right temperature and im sure it would be what it is not at what it should be at the right temperature when it should be wrong so basicaly you agree to disagree.... what im saying is NO!
No chemical reaction between water and sodium carbonate, only solving of the sodium carbonate in water.
Water molecule is polar covalent, but has a negligible ionic behavior.
If you mix sodium carbonate and water, you would observe that the sodium carbonate dissolves in the water. This is because sodium carbonate is highly soluble in water. The solution may also become slightly warm due to the dissolution process.
No, because water is polar and polar dissolves in polar then non polar covalent bond cannot dissolve in water.
Sodium carbonate is more soluble.
ionic - Sodium Chloride Covalent - Water ionic - Sodium Chloride Covalent - Water
by removing the water
Sodium cations and carbonate anions.
Sodium carbonate doesn't react with water; it is only dissolved and dissociated.