No.
The dietary fiber that is most helpful in reducing serum cholesterol is soluble fiber. The soluble fiber excretes the cholesterol. Foods that have soluble fiber are plant based.
The oils are easily soluble in gasoline (petrol) but they are also soluble in benzene but not in water and ethanol.
Yes
Perhaps?
Sodium Chloride is an ionic compound and ha a high hydration energy. Hence, it is highly soluble in polar solvents like water, But it is not very soluble in gasoline since gasoline is a non-polar solvent.
Cholesterol is only partly soluble in water. Cholesterol is a lipid (fat) which in water at room temperature, most fats are mostly insoluble in water. At higher temperatures fats are slightly more soluble.
Hexane and gasoline both are insoluble in water.
steroids
steroids
No. Hexane is a component of gasoline and solvents.
Gasoline is hydrophobic because the molecules are non-polar. Only polar molecules are soluble in water.