Benzene is a non polar solvent. Gelatin powder is a polar solute. So gelatin powder in insoluble in benzene.
Synthetic magnesium silicates are insoluble in water or alcohol.
The solubility difference between methyl alcohol (CH3OH) and benzene (C6H6) is related to the polar nature of methyl alcohol and the non polar nature of benzene. The OH group on methyl alcohol makes this a polar molecule and thus soluble in water. The lack of such a polar group in benzene makes it non polar, and thus insoluble in water.
Yes! it is soluble in water.
Yes, milk powder is soluble in water. Otherwise you'd get chunky milk when you went to use it!
Iron powder is not soluble in water.
Sodium chloride is not soluble in benzene.
Yes. Toluene and benzene are each soluble in the other. Neither is soluble in water.
Benzene is only soluble in other organic solvents. It is not soluble in water or other polar solvents.
The oils are easily soluble in gasoline (petrol) but they are also soluble in benzene but not in water and ethanol.
Yes
Benzene, being a covalent compound is not soluble in water. So a solution of benzene in water is absurd. However in answering your question I would say that, as benzene is not soluble in water it does not function as an electrolyte. Some more improvement would be that benzene itself is not an electrolyte.
gelatin powder
No. K2CO3 is polar while benzene is non-polar. Since like dissolves like, K2CO3 is insoluble in benzene.
yes
Agar powder Is gelatin extracted from seaweed
Anthracene is a colorless crystalline aromatic hydrocarbon obtained by the distillation of crude oils. It is soluble in benzene, which is given as 0.083 M.
soluble