The molecule of carbon tetrachloride is nonpolar.
nonpolar
CCl4 is tetrahedral, the pull of the chlorine atoms on the electrons cancel each other out. CCl4 is nonpolar.Nonpolar because CCl4 forms a tetrahedral, making all of the atoms cancel out.
Carbon tetrachloride is nonpolar.
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.
It is not polar. only the bonds between the chlorine and carbon are polar
CCl4 is a non polar solvent and therefore dissole ionic compounds
No. The individual bonds are polar, but the molecule as a whole is symmetric and therefore nonpolar.
Yes it can. CCL4 is a non polar molecule meaning that it is miscible with other non polar substances such as oils. Because of this it will not mix well with water, just like oil.
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.
Iodine is a non polar compound so it is readily soluble in non polar liquids like CCl4.
It is not polar. only the bonds between the chlorine and carbon are polar
CCl4 is a non polar solvent and therefore dissole ionic compounds
No. The individual bonds are polar, but the molecule as a whole is symmetric and therefore nonpolar.
Yes it can. CCL4 is a non polar molecule meaning that it is miscible with other non polar substances such as oils. Because of this it will not mix well with water, just like oil.
Cl4 does not exist, but if CCl4 is meant: this is a nonpolar compound
CCl4 is more polar. Electronegativity difference between C and H = 0.5 whereas C and Cl = 0.6 Therefore, CCl4 has a slightly stronger pull towards Cl.
Yes. They are both quite non polar.
The individual bonds are polar, but they're symmetric so the molecule overall is considered nonpolar.
not necessarily. if the individual dipoles cancel off, then the molecule will be non-polar. As in CCl4, PCl5 etc
I think you have a typo in your molecular formula but CH3Cl is a polar molecule and CCL4 is a non-polar molecule