Cyclohexane can form only one mono-substituted alkyl chloride. Because cyclohexane is a symmetrical molecule with only a single type of carbon atom and no stereoisomers will be formed because there are no asymmetric centers, the product will be the same no matter which carbon the chlorine atom attaches to.
Cyclohexane is flammable.
Cyclohexane (C6H12) is a cycloalkane, not an esther.
Cyclohexane has no charge. It is a compound, not an ion.
NFPA 704 for cyclohexane: 1-3-0
Sodium chloride is a polar compound and cyclohexane is not a polar compound.
All carbons in cyclohexane are equivilent, so one (a singlet).
Cyclohexane is flammable.
No, sodium chloride is not soluble in cyclohexane.
Cyclohexane (C6H12) is a cycloalkane, not an esther.
Cyclohexane has no charge. It is a compound, not an ion.
No, cyclohexane is a neutral compound.
water is polar and the cyclohexane is not
Three other positional isomers are possible,, 1,2 - 1,3 and 1,4 bromochloro isomers.
Cyclohexane contains only covalent bonds.
In cyclohexane molecule are the bonds are covalent (sigma) bonds.
they are immiscible cyclohexane floats on water surface.
Cyclohexane doesn't form ions in water.