water
no
They are miscible.
Yes, they are miscible.
yes, at STP, as the change in gibbs free energy is negaitve for all cases. however, the mixing does require heat input to stay isothermal, as heat is required to break the hydrogen bonding of ethanol by cyclohexane
miscible
no
Yes, methanol miscible.
They are miscible.
No. Cyclohexane is non-polar and water is polar, and so they will not mix with each other.
Yes, they are miscible.
yes, at STP, as the change in gibbs free energy is negaitve for all cases. however, the mixing does require heat input to stay isothermal, as heat is required to break the hydrogen bonding of ethanol by cyclohexane
miscible
No, they both are not miscible and is a heterogeneous solution
yes
no
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
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.