Commonly sodium chloride is not dissolved in organic compounds.
No, it is not soluble.
Not to any appreciable extent.
It acts as buffers
benzene, toluene, chloroform, dichloromethane, ethyl acetate
Sodium Chloride has a higher melting point because at room temperature it is a solid but Ethyl alcohol has already melted, as it is liquid.
Yes, ethanol belongs to the alcohol functional group therefore polar, and BaCl2 is polar, so it does dissolve.
yes ethyl acetate is better option....................
50:50 ethyl acetate and petroleum ether gives an rf value of about 0.6.You are supposed to dissolve the compound in any volatile solvent like methylene chloride or acetone.
It is an ester. Ethyl alcohol + acetic acid ---> ethyl acetate C2H5OH + CH3COOH ----> CH3COOC2H5
water is more dense than ethyl acetate , so water remains on bottom and ethyl acetate on top when both mixed.
No.. Ethyl acetate is C2H5COOCH3 and Diethyl ether is C2H5OC2H5
You get an ethyl acetate in water solution
Solubility of ethyl acetate (ethyl ethanoate) in water is 8.3 g/100 mL at 20 °C.