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Water as its most commonly found in salt Not water...
Iodine is much more soluble in ethanol than in water, so it will usually form a homogeneous mixture. Of course, if you add more solid iodine than will dissolve in your quantity of ethanol at the temperature at which you are working, the excess solid will sink to the bottom. In that case, you have a heterogeneous mixture.
To enhance the solubility of iodine in water, you can increase the temperature of the water as iodine is more soluble in hot water. Stirring or agitating the solution can also help by increasing the surface area and facilitating the contact between iodine and water molecules. Additionally, adding a solubility-enhancing agent like potassium iodide can significantly increase the solubility of iodine in water.
Iodine is much more soluble in ethanol than in water, so it will usually form a homogeneous mixture. Of course, if you add more solid iodine than will dissolve in your quantity of ethanol at the temperature at which you are working, the excess solid will sink to the bottom. In that case, you have a heterogeneous mixture.
NaCl is soluble in cold water but more readily soluble in hot water
Iodine is not soluble in water because iodine is nonpolar and water is polar. According to the "Like dissolve like" expression, nonpolar substances are soluble with nonpolar substances and polar substances are soluble with polar substances, but nonpolar substances are not soluble with polar substances.
carbon disulfide
Water as its most commonly found in salt Not water...
Iodine is much more soluble in ethanol than in water, so it will usually form a homogeneous mixture. Of course, if you add more solid iodine than will dissolve in your quantity of ethanol at the temperature at which you are working, the excess solid will sink to the bottom. In that case, you have a heterogeneous mixture.
To enhance the solubility of iodine in water, you can increase the temperature of the water as iodine is more soluble in hot water. Stirring or agitating the solution can also help by increasing the surface area and facilitating the contact between iodine and water molecules. Additionally, adding a solubility-enhancing agent like potassium iodide can significantly increase the solubility of iodine in water.
Iodine is much more soluble in ethanol than in water, so it will usually form a homogeneous mixture. Of course, if you add more solid iodine than will dissolve in your quantity of ethanol at the temperature at which you are working, the excess solid will sink to the bottom. In that case, you have a heterogeneous mixture.
definitely more soluble in water....
Iodine crystals are not soluble in water. This is because Iodine crystals are non-polar. Water is a polar molecule and it therefore cannot attract an one of the iodine atoms since they have an electronegativity of zero.
Oxygen is more soluble in fresh water.
Bromine is soluble in water.
No. Iodine exist as I2, which is formed by the induced dipole-induced dipole interaction. Thus, it is a non-polar compound. Water, which is a polar solvent, prefers to stay hydrogen bonded then break up iodine. Remember: like dissolves like. This means that non-polar compounds like iodine will dissolve in non-polar solvent such as hexane, which polar compounds such as hydrochlorine gas will dissolve in polar solvents like water.
NaCl is soluble in cold water but more readily soluble in hot water