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Yes to be a solvent it has to be a liquid
The answer is "It dissolves something else" on Apex
Sodium chloride is ionic and only dissolves in polar solvents- water is excellent. In non-polar organic solvents such as hydrocarbons it is insoluble but in polar organic solvents it has limited solubility, e.g. in methanol and tetrahydrofuran.
the only polar solvents dissolve the ionic compound the poles of solvent molecules attract the ions of opposite charge and make them separate from each other.
Like dissolves like meaning that a polar substance will dissolve a polar substance and nonpolar substance will dissolve other polar substances. By contrast nonpolar and polar substances will not dissolve one another.
Yes to be a solvent it has to be a liquid
solvents are sniffed only
Only some organic solvents have a hallucinogen effect.
Benzene is only soluble in other organic solvents. It is not soluble in water or other polar solvents.
No-- Liposomes are only formed in polar solvents (i.e. water)
The only metal that is liquid at room temperature is Mercury (Hg).
The answer is "It dissolves something else" on Apex
Solubility. LAH is not soluble in other solvents which would otherwise be appropriate.
Also nonpolar solvents.
Ionic compounds (like alcohols) are soluble only in polar solvents (eg. water).
Like dissolves like. Polar compounds dissolve in polar solvents and nonpolar compounds dissolve in nonpolar solvents. An exception to this rule, however, is that an electronegative atom can only take four or five carbons into a polar solvent. An alcohol with an alkyl chain seven carbons long, for example, will not be soluble in a polar solvent, even though it is a polar molecule.
Sudan IV is only soluble in certain solvents.