Yes. They are both quite non polar.
Yes
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
Carbon tetrachloride is not miscible with water but miscible with many other liquid organic compounds.
Yes they are mixing together. but they are not reacting.
Benzene is a nonpolar molecule as well as carbon tetrachloride, however water is a polar molecule. Based on the rules of solubility, "like dissolves like"; the attraction between nonpolar molecules have the same kind of interaction and strength but the attractions between the highly polar molecule of water are very different, therefore substituting these attractions for new attraction with benzene will require a greater change in enthalpy.
A liquid with two layers will form because water is polar and benzene is nonpolar. The two are not miscible.
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
Yes. kerosene is miscible in CCl4.
Carbon tetrachloride is not miscible with water but miscible with many other liquid organic compounds.
Yes Oil and benzene are miscible, both are hydrophobics and lypophylics.
If it is pure benzene and CCl4 your answer is; % Benzene = (m Benzene)/(m Total)*100 = 14.2 / (14.2 + 28) * 100 = 33.65 % If the solution is benzene and CCl4 dissolved in water or another solvent, the answer depends entirely on how much solvent you have.
Yes they are mixing together. but they are not reacting.
Benzene is a nonpolar molecule as well as carbon tetrachloride, however water is a polar molecule. Based on the rules of solubility, "like dissolves like"; the attraction between nonpolar molecules have the same kind of interaction and strength but the attractions between the highly polar molecule of water are very different, therefore substituting these attractions for new attraction with benzene will require a greater change in enthalpy.
Yes, hexane and benzene are miscible (that is, when combined they mix together to form one layer) because they are both nonpolar (that is, because "like dissolves like" the liquid with the greater volume will become the solvent and dissolve the solute).
A liquid with two layers will form because water is polar and benzene is nonpolar. The two are not miscible.
Yes, both are non-polar so, both are miscible.
KNO3 is potassium nitrate. It is an IONIC compound which dissolved in water. CCl4 is tetrachloromethane, it is a COVALENT compound, which is misxible in organic solvents.
No, they are miscible. Acetone dissolves both polar compounds and nonpolar comounds well. That's why acetone is used to wash chemicals off.