Sodium chloride is a polar compound.
Sodium chloride is a polar compound and cyclohexane is not a polar compound.
Sodium chloride is dissolved in water because is a polar, ionic compond.
Sodium chloride is ionic, and therefore very polar. Isopropanol is a hydrocarbon, and is therefore non-polar. Like dissolves like, and polar and non-polar are opposites, so the salt doesn't dissolve. Water, however, will easily dissolve salt, because, like salt, water is polar.
hot water ----------------- Sodium chloride solubility in water is not so dependent on the temperature. The dissolution is possible because sodium chloride and water are polar compounds.
When sodium chloride is dissolved in water, a process called solvation occurs. Water is a polar in nature and it is a polar solvent. The water molecule has a positive end and a negative end . The positive part of the water molecule is attracted to the negative part of the sodium chloride, the chloride ion. The negative part of the water is attracted to the positive part of the sodium chloride, the sodium ion. Thus, the sodium chloride dissociates, or breaks apart in water
Because sodium chloride and water are ionic compounds.
Water is polar. NaCl is polar. Polar substances are soluble in polar solvents.
Water is a polar solvent and NaCl is an ionic compound.
Sodium chloride is easily dissolved in water because it is a polar compound.
Because sodium chloride is strongly polarized by the ions Na+ and Cl-.
Sodium chloride is a polar compound.
Sodium chloride is a a polar molecule.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water because these two substances are polar.
Sodium chloride is highly polar (ionic in fact) where hexane is very not. The two don't attract at all, so each is insoluble in the other.
because sodium chloride itself is madee up of positive sodium and negative chloride ions
Because carbon disulfide is a non-polar solvent sodium chloride is not soluble.
This possible because sodium chloride is a polar, ionic compound.