non polar
non polar.
Bromine is more soluble in hexane than water. Br2 is non polar so it dissolves good in an non polar solvent like hexane. Water is a polar solvent.
No, it is non-polar.
Br - Br. It is a single bond non-polar covalent bond.
ccl4 will dissolve better in water because likes dissolves likes, H2O is non-polar an CCL4 is also non polar where as ch2cl2 is polar(different to water) there for it wont dissolve in water but CCL4 will^^This is not true: water is polar. Therefore, since CCl4 is non-polar, and CH2Cl2 is polar, and like dissolves like, CH2Cl2 is more soluble.
non polar.
Bromine is more soluble in hexane than water. Br2 is non polar so it dissolves good in an non polar solvent like hexane. Water is a polar solvent.
Br2 is non polar covalent
No, it is non-polar.
because water is highly polar and Br2 is non-polar so the molecules in the water are more attracted to each other. But methylene chloride is non-polar so its molecules are no more strongly attracted to other methylene chloride molecules than they are to Br2 molecules. Since all of the forces are weak, the substance can dissolve.
Br - Br. It is a single bond non-polar covalent bond.
Br2 and C6H14 are soluble in non-polar solvents such as CCl4.
ccl4 will dissolve better in water because likes dissolves likes, H2O is non-polar an CCL4 is also non polar where as ch2cl2 is polar(different to water) there for it wont dissolve in water but CCL4 will^^This is not true: water is polar. Therefore, since CCl4 is non-polar, and CH2Cl2 is polar, and like dissolves like, CH2Cl2 is more soluble.
When the charge between molecules hasn't completely cancelled out. Br2 will cancel- vdw forces H2O will not- dipole-dipole bonds
Elemental bromine would be expected to be soluble in hexane. Bromine, Br2(l), is non-polar; hexane, C6H14(l) is also non-polar. Like dissolves like.
No
i believe Cl2 H2 N2 O2 Br2 I2 ect