Aniline (phenylamine) is only slightly soluble in water (3.6g/mL @ 20C). This is a volatile amine. It would be similar to trying to mix benzene with water, or any other typical household solvent/degreaser with water. You would see a separation of the liquids into layers.
In o-aniline phenol Intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs which is not possible in meta and is responsible for less solubility
They are miscible.
Benzyl alcohol is soluble in ether because both benzyl alcohol and ether are nonpolar in nature. Like dissolves like, so nonpolar molecules tend to dissolve in other nonpolar solvents such as ether. This is due to the lack of significant difference in electronegativity between the molecules, allowing for interactions such as London dispersion forces to occur.
The motivation is the presence of three hydroxyl groups in glycerine.
Fats are soluble in nonpolar compounds such as other fats, oils, and organic solvents like benzene and ether. They are not soluble in water or other polar solvents.
ibuprofen is soluble in diethyl ether
Aniline is soluble in hydrochloric acid because it reacts with the acid to form anilinium chloride, a salt that is water-soluble. This reaction involves protonation of the nitrogen atom in aniline by the HCl, making the resulting salt soluble in water due to its increased polarity compared to the parent compound.
Both being two polar compounds, aniline is highly soluble in acetic acid.
Diethyl ether does not dissove in ether at room temperature
Sodium chloride is not soluble in ether.
No, sodium bicarbonate is not soluable in ether.
Water is a polar liquid; ether is not.
Yes, bromohexane is soluble in diethyl ether because both are nonpolar organic compounds. Nonpolar compounds tend to be soluble in other nonpolar solvents like diethyl ether.
No.
Yes
The lipid glycerol is soluble in both water and ether. Olive oil is soluble in ether, but not water. A solid lipid is insoluble in water, methanol, and ether.
Yes, chloroform is soluble in ether. Both chloroform and ether are organic solvents that can dissolve each other due to their similar chemical properties.