aspirin is non-polar, although it does have one alcohol group. The molecule is still considered non-polar due to the larger section of non-polarity. it will have a slight dipole, but probably not enough to hydrogen bond.
Polar!
CCl4 is nonpolar.
Its ionic
Be and Cl form an ionic bond (BeCl2), and it is polar.
CaF2 is considered an ionic compound because it is composed of a metal cation (Ca) and a nonmetal anion (F) bonded together through ionic bonds. It is not considered as polar or nonpolar since ionic compounds do not have distinct polar or nonpolar characteristics as covalent compounds do.
Barium hydroxide is considered ionic rather than polar or nonpolar. It is a compound composed of ions (Ba2+ and OH-) held together by ionic bonds, where the Barium ion is positively charged and the hydroxide ion is negatively charged.
Phenyl salicylate has covalent bonds, which are typically nonpolar. The molecule is symmetrical and contains nonpolar functional groups, making it nonpolar overall.
A) nonpolar compounds will not dissolve in water because water is polar
Calcium hydroxide is ionic, and therefore polarity does not occur.
No, Mg3N2 does not contain nonpolar bonds. The bond between magnesium and nitrogen in Mg3N2 is ionic, not covalent, resulting in polar bonds due to the electronegativity difference between the two elements.
Yes it will be weakly acidic. Aspirin's scientific name is acetylsalicylic acid, with a pKa of 3.5. This would mean that for a solution of 0.1 M aspirin, the pH of the solution would be approximately 2.26.
Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) is generally considered to be poorly soluble in kerosene, as it is a polar molecule while kerosene is a non-polar solvent. The solubility of aspirin in kerosene is minimal due to the "like dissolves like" principle, which suggests that polar substances dissolve well in polar solvents and non-polar substances dissolve in non-polar solvents. Therefore, if you're trying to dissolve aspirin in kerosene, you would not achieve significant solubility.