Yes they are mixing. but they are not reacting.
miscible
no
water
Yes they are mixing together. but they are not reacting.
Chloroform (CHCl3), although it is polar, cannot form hydrogen bonds with water and thus the interactions between chloroform and water are too weak to be miscible. In addition, chloroform is significantly heavier than water and will form a bottom layer if mixed.
miscible
no
no
water
Chloroform is miscible with ethanol, carbon tetrachloride, benzene, diethyil ether etc.
Yes they are mixing together. but they are not reacting.
CBr4
No, they both are not miscible and is a heterogeneous solution
Water and octane are practically non miscible.
Yes it is. Because they are both not polar.
Chloroform (CHCl3), although it is polar, cannot form hydrogen bonds with water and thus the interactions between chloroform and water are too weak to be miscible. In addition, chloroform is significantly heavier than water and will form a bottom layer if mixed.
If you meant C8H18, it is an octane-isomer, than the answer is NO, not miscible with water. Petrol contains a lot (>50%) of octane molecules.