When a solid "mixes" with a liquid the solid can be termed soluble and will "dissolve" in said liquid (salt and water), if the solid does not dissolve it is termed insoluble (sand in a glass of water). When a liquid "mixes" with another liquid the two are classed as miscible, if the two liquids do not mix and form two separate layers, the liquids are classed as being immiscible
Immiscible liquids are liquids that don't dissolve in one another. Two examples of immiscible liquids would be alcohol and water and gasoline and water.
Miscible liquids are liquids that form a homogeneous mixture when they are added together. Obviously liquids that are immiscible do not form a homogeneous mixture when they are added together.
Almost any oil and water do not mix. Immiscible is the word
They are immiscible fluids.
When a solid "mixes" with a liquid the solid can be termed soluble and will "dissolve" in said liquid (salt and water), if the solid does not dissolve it is termed insoluble (sand in a glass of water). When a liquid "mixes" with another liquid the two are classed as miscible, if the two liquids do not mix and form two separate layers, the liquids are classed as being immiscible
no
immiscible oil and water copper and cobalt
No, wax and water are immiscible.
water is polar and the cyclohexane is not
Immiscible, of course. Greasy stuff like toluene is not water soluble to any significant degree.
No, they are immiscible. I want to improve the answer: Though oil and water are immiscible normally but they can be made immiscible by use of suitable surfactants or better say emulsifying agents resulting in the formation of mixture of oil and water called as emulsion.
Anything immiscible is incapable of being blended or mixed together, such liquids that are shaken, normally settle into layers. On the assumption that ice cubes are formed by freezing water, they are not immiscible when frozen, but immiscible when defrosted
Immiscible means incapable of mixing, but you'd (you might) have to ask further incase there is a special solution called 'immiscible solution' of which its inability to mix is only one aspect of it.
Yes, because water is polar and oil is non-polar. So they don't mix at the particle level, which is what immiscible means.
Hexane and water are not miscible as the water is a polar solvent and hexane is a non-polar solvent, hence it is immiscible. There is a proverb that like dissolves like.
immiscible - oil and water miscible - water and ethyl alcohol