lead2chloride
Many organic compounds are insoluble in water. They have carbon and hydrogen as elements.
Most of the organic compounds are solids, combustible, non polar and insoluble in water.
No, it is soluble, all the compounds of Potassium and alkali metals are soluble in water.
Ionic compounds are soluble in water because water is also ionic compound and insoluble in kerosene oil because there is covalent bonds
Some examples of insoluble bromide compounds include silver bromide (AgBr), lead(II) bromide (PbBr2), and mercury(I) bromide (Hg2Br2). These compounds do not dissolve easily in water and form solid precipitates when bromide ions are combined with the corresponding metal ions.
Many organic compounds are insoluble in water. They have carbon and hydrogen as elements.
Lipids are not soluble in water.
No, all the sulfate compounds are highly soluble in water.
No, most hydroxides are insoluble in water.
Of its simple inorganic compounds, lead sulphate and lead chloride are insoluble in water, so would be in nitric acid, which is mostly water. Lead monoxide and lead carbonate are not soluble, but react with the acid so they appear soluble.
Most of the organic compounds are solids, combustible, non polar and insoluble in water.
Both are bicyclic aromatic solid compounds insoluble in water
Cations don't always form soluble compounds. In general, ionic compounds are soluble in very polar solvents such as water and insoluble in nonpolar solvents because the charged ions can be solvated only by polar solvents. Some ionic compounds are insoluble even in water, however.
mostly all organic compounds are insoluble in water because water is a polar solvent and organic compounds are non polar . non polar substances are soluble only in non polar solvents like benzene etc.
Silver chloride (AgCl) is insoluble in water.
No, it is soluble, all the compounds of Potassium and alkali metals are soluble in water.
Um, I don't know about the other compounds, but ZnS is insoluble.