No. Zinc is not soluble. It is a metal like gold is not soluble in water. There are some compounds of zinc like ZnCl that are soluble. I just learned this last unit in Chem class.
As posted, the question would logically refer to a reaction in the solid state - there is no reaction. There is also none in water solution as stearic acid is not significantly water-soluable. The reaction between the two would produce zinc stearate and water.
Zinc carbonate is insoluble in water, just like most carbonates. It cannot form interactions or hydrogen bonds with water molecules. Thus unlike compounds like sodium chloride which can form ion-dipole interactions with water molecules, zinc carbonate is insoluble.
88
Zinc is the full name of the metal. Zinc is an transition element, proton number 30, Relative atomic mass about 65. However, there are loads of possible zinc compounds (zinc chemically tied to something else) such as Zinc chloride, zinc sulphate, zinc nitrate...
Zinc + hydrochloric acid = zinc chloride + hydrogen
Lipids are fats. Vitamins are divided onto two types, those which are water soluable and those which are fat soluable. Fat soluable vitamins are A.D.E and K. Hope this helps.
water
YES!
Soluable
Yes, sugar is soluable in alcohol. I am assuming you mean drinking alcohol although it is soluable in all organic alcohols. The hyrdoxy (-OH) groups on both the sugar and the alcohol allow for hydrogen bonding, making sugar very soluable in alcohol. Hydrogen bonds are also the reason sugar is so soluable in water.
As posted, the question would logically refer to a reaction in the solid state - there is no reaction. There is also none in water solution as stearic acid is not significantly water-soluable. The reaction between the two would produce zinc stearate and water.
yes it is soluable in water because it is found in sea water two please message me if you think im wrong :)
No. Hydrochlorides are added to medications to make them more water soluable. The opioid hydrocodone is already water soluable (see the name).
Zinc carbonate is insoluble in water, just like most carbonates. It cannot form interactions or hydrogen bonds with water molecules. Thus unlike compounds like sodium chloride which can form ion-dipole interactions with water molecules, zinc carbonate is insoluble.
lipid soluable means that it disolves in fat, and water soluable means it disolves in water.
because they are not soluable
No, they are both soluable in water