Water is a common solvent in chemistry; also a washing agent in filtering, water vapors extraction, etc.
No, it is not an organic compound.
Water is not an organic compound, as it lacks carbon atoms.
One way to remove salt from a water-soluble organic compound is through a process called liquid-liquid extraction using an organic solvent. By adding the organic solvent, the salt will partition into the solvent phase, allowing for separation from the water-soluble organic compound. Another method is using techniques like distillation or reverse osmosis to separate the organic compound from the salt solution.
Sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) is commonly used in organic chemistry as a drying agent to remove water from organic compounds. It helps to absorb any remaining water molecules in the organic phase and aids in the separation of the organic compound from water during extraction or purification processes.
If water is added to an organic compound, the compound can dissolve in water if it is soluble or form a separate layer if it is insoluble. In some cases, the compound may react with water to form a new compound.
Ethanol is miscible with water, which means that it mixes completely with water. As a result, using ethanol to extract an organic compound from water would not effectively separate the two substances since the compound would end up being mixed with both the water and the ethanol. This would make it difficult to isolate the organic compound.
no
Cellulose is an organic compound used to transform water although the cell is being protected by a cell membrane
Cellulose is an organic compound used to transform water although the cell is being protected by a cell membrane
Water is an inorganic compound.
Water is an inorganic compound.
H2O (water) is an inorganic compound, not an organic compound. Inorganic compounds do not contain carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bonds, which are characteristic of organic compounds.