water is a polar molecule, hexane is non polar. substances with like polarities mix, therefore the non polar iodine mixes with hexane and not water
yes it can. It dissolves almost immediately to form a deep purple solution
Yes, iodine is soluble in hexane.
Yes, it is :-)
Iodine is dissolved in hexane.
Hexane is a non-polar solvent, so it will not dissolve in water. Kerosene is non-polar so it will dissolve in Hexane.
no but hexane dissolves in sulfuric acid
hexane
NaCl will not dissolve in Hexane because NaCl is a polar molecule and Hexane is a non-polar molecule. NaCl is insoluble in Hexane. On the other hand, NaCl will dissolve in water because both are polar molecules. "Like dissolves like".
The color would be a yellowish-orange.
Hexane is a non-polar solvent, so it will not dissolve in water. Kerosene is non-polar so it will dissolve in Hexane.
Iodine is soluble in hexane.
no but hexane dissolves in sulfuric acid
hexane
Because iodine is nonpolar, a nonpolar substance like ethanol would dissolve it. Iodine is insoluble in polar substances like water.
NaCl will not dissolve in Hexane because NaCl is a polar molecule and Hexane is a non-polar molecule. NaCl is insoluble in Hexane. On the other hand, NaCl will dissolve in water because both are polar molecules. "Like dissolves like".
yes
No. Hexane is a nonpolar liquid and so will not dissolve an ionic substance.
The color would be a yellowish-orange.
No. Hexane is a nonpolar substance so it would not dissolve ionic compounds.
NO iodine can not dissolve in water but it can dissolve in benzene
Iodine can be separated by:- extraction with an adequate solvent, for ex. hexane- heating and evaporation