Yes, fructose is the most soluble carbohydrate in water.
Both are solids !!
No, NaCl (sodium chloride) is not soluble in hexane. Hexane is a nonpolar solvent, while NaCl is an ionic compound that dissolves in polar solvents like water.
Sodium chlorate is very soluble in water.
Yes, AgCl can be separated from NaCl by adding ammonia solution. AgCl is insoluble in ammonia, so it will precipitate out as a solid while NaCl remains in the solution. The two can then be filtered or separated by decantation.
An example of a salt soluble in hot water is table salt, also known as sodium chloride (NaCl). When added to hot water, table salt dissolves easily due to the high temperature causing the salt crystals to break down and disperse uniformly throughout the water.
Both are solids !!
Fructose is soluble in water.
NaCl
NaCl is not soluble in acetone.
Because it is a soluble salt
Sodium chloride is not soluble in ether.
Because NaCl is a polar, ionic compound.
No, NaCl (sodium chloride) is not soluble in hexane. Hexane is a nonpolar solvent, while NaCl is an ionic compound that dissolves in polar solvents like water.
Not soluble
NaCl is easily soluble in water; BaSO4 is insoluble.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water but not in organic solvents.
Some are soluble (NaCl), some are insoluble (AgCl).