Totally different substances. Don't try to interchange them.
Ammonia is not organic. Others are organic molecules
Magnesium iodide is soluble in ethanol, ammonia or ethyl ether.
No. Methane is CH4 whereas ammonia is NH3.
No, (hydrogen) peroxide and ammonia are two different chemicals.
Ethanol is less viscous than ethylene glycol at the same temperature. This is because ethanol only has one -OH group, which is responsible for viscosity.
Ammonia is not organic. Others are organic molecules
Magnesium iodide is soluble in ethanol, ammonia or ethyl ether.
Try reacting furan-2-aldehyde with ammonia in ethanol
Absolutely, recent painstaking scientific research has showed that 70% ethanol is the same as 70% ethanol.
Examples: sodium chloride, acetic acid, ethanol, ammonia solution, sulfuric acid.
No, it is not. Salt water is NaCl and H2O, while ethanol is C2H5OH.
No. Methane is CH4 whereas ammonia is NH3.
No, (hydrogen) peroxide and ammonia are two different chemicals.
The most common solvent is water; also used are ethanol, cyclohexane, liquid ammonia, etc.
Ethanol is less viscous than ethylene glycol at the same temperature. This is because ethanol only has one -OH group, which is responsible for viscosity.
ammonia is a disinfectant and is used in the same way as bleach
Yes, they are the same.