answering the question would be possible if there was a question in the first place..
the larger the molecular weight of the alcohol, the less soluble it is in water
Phenols are less soluble in water because of the presence of the benzene ring. This is because the phenyl ring is much more hydrophobic than the ethyl chain.
You can predict the solubility curve vs Temperature for adiptic acid in water by plotting a graph.
In o-aniline phenol Intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs which is not possible in meta and is responsible for less solubility
Grams of solute per 100 grams of water
Both water and phenol are very weak acids. Though phenol is the stronger of the two.
The solubility of gas increases in cold water. The solubility of solid increases in hot water.
You can predict the solubility curve vs Temperature for adiptic acid in water by plotting a graph.
In o-aniline phenol Intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs which is not possible in meta and is responsible for less solubility
At 67*C and higher. That's a critical dissolving temperature.
Soluble in what? It is very slightly soluble in in boiling water, soluble in m-cresol and phenol, and is degraded by acids.
Temperatures are usually written on the x-axis of a solubility curve. Grams per 100 grams of water is usually shown on the y-axis.
Grams of solute per 100 grams of water
Grams of solute per 100 grams of water
Both water and phenol are very weak acids. Though phenol is the stronger of the two.
No. Phenol is far more acidic than water.
the critical solution temperature for phenol water system increases
why phenol more than aliphatic alcohol and water
The specific answer to this question depends on the exact solubility curve diagrams you are looking at. However, a web search for images of solubility curves provide many common curves. Using those images shows that sodium chloride, NaCl, often has the least change in solubility in water from 0-100 degrees C.