yea water can dissolve polar compounds
Water, salt and ammonia are inorganic compounds.
Ionic compounds are dissociated in water solution.
The water is called solvent, the compounds to be dissolved are solutes
Water and vinegar are both compounds, oxygen is an element.
No. There are a number of compounds that are soluble in water, but there are a large number of compounds and substances that are not.
The method is the evaporation of water followed by condensation of water.
Like dissolves like. Water is polar solvent and hence it dissolves ionic and polar compounds.
Hydrophobic compounds are non-polar compounds. This means that they have symmetric distribution in charge, and they are not water soluble.
Water can dissolve some ionic compounds as well as some molecular compounds because of its polarity. It is polar enough to dissolve ionic compounds into their ions. Water does not dissolve molecular compounds by breaking covalent bonds, but through intermolecular forces.
The conductivity difference between organic and inorganic compounds is carbon molecules. The Organic compounds have carbon molecules and inorganic do not.
Compounds that have an affinity for water are known as hygroscopic. If the affinity is strong enough to attract water until the compound goes into solution, they are called deliquescent.