no, corn starch cannot dissolve in water. The grains (particles) that are in the cornstarch are "suspended" in the water and cannot totally dissolve in the water.
Corn starch is a souluble starch.
Pure isolated chlorophyll is soluble in acetone
Yes, trimyristin is soluble in acetone. Trimyristin is a lipid compound that is soluble in polar organic solvents like acetone due to its nonpolar nature.
NaCl is not soluble in acetone.
Polysaccharides are nonsoluble in acetone. Cold acetone can be used to precipitate polysaccharides to obtain an amount of dry polysaccharide sample.
no. but its soluble in water and semi soluble in alcohol
Sodium nitrate is 'sparingly soluble' in acetone. That means it is insoluble, for all intents and purposes. The reason for its insolubility is that sodium nitrate is polar (ionic) and acetone is non-polar.
Yes, chloroform is soluble in acetone. Both chloroform and acetone are polar solvents, which allows them to mix together easily.
Not really. It gets really cloudy, so roughly a tenth of it is actually being dissolved. Quick check: Did you have to stir it in? If yes, then it's not soluble.
Acetone and water are miscible liquids.
NO
No