No, like other hydrocarbons ethane is nonpolar.
Ethanal is polar, and it can be dissolved in water-which is also polar.
yes ethene ---> C2H4 is non-polar
Water molecules have hydrogen bonds between them. Since they cannot form hydrogen bonds with the ethoxyethane molecules, the ethoxyethane molcules are not soluble in water.
No its not polar
Polar
Nonpolar
IOF5 is polar - O has a double bond
Ethoxyethane Ethyl = 2 carbons ethane + oxygen + ethane = ethoxyethane
Water molecules have hydrogen bonds between them. Since they cannot form hydrogen bonds with the ethoxyethane molecules, the ethoxyethane molcules are not soluble in water.
That's some odd terminology there, I tell you what. Nearly everyone calls "ethoxyethane" just "ether" or, sometimes, "ethyl ether" or "diethyl ether". "Alcohol" is a class of compounds, but usually means "ethanol". So you've used one excessively pedantic name, and one really ambiguous name. That said, the answer is yes, it is. For that matter, it's soluble in water to some extent.
Diethyl ether, and 1-butanol are similar in size (number of electrons), therefore, their boiling points will be determined by polarity. Diethyl ether has two polar C-O bonds. 1-butanol also has two polar bonds (C-O and O-H), but the O-H bond is more polar than the C-O bond, making 1-butanol more polar than diethyl ether and giving it a higher boiling point. Diethyl ether has weaker intermolecular forces of attraction and therefore a lower boiling point.
No its not polar
It is a polar molecule and has polar bonds.
Polar contains polar. Non-polar contains nothing.
Polar
Polar
ClO4 is polar.
Nonpolar
polar