The polarity or charges of compounds will determine if a compound would dissolve in water, where compounds with opposite charges within their molecules dissolve in water.
A compound's solubility in a solvent is determined by the strength and type of intermolecular forces between the compound's molecules and the solvent molecules. Compounds with similar intermolecular forces are more likely to dissolve in each other. Additionally, temperature, pressure, and the molecular structure of the compound also play a role in determining solubility.
The most important characteristic is the polarity of the solvent and solute.
What determines a molecule's solubility degree in water is its polarity. Equals dissolve.
A non polar compound would be least likely to dissolve in water.
Whether your foot is on it or not.
When you dissolve a substance in a liquid you get a solution.
yes
protons
phenols
A low solubility product constant indicates that the compound has low solubility in a particular solvent. It means that only a small amount of the compound will dissolve in the solvent at equilibrium.
Sodium chloride is a polar compound and cyclohexane is not a polar compound.
Non-polar compounds are least likely to dissolve in water because water is a polar solvent and non-polar compounds do not interact well with polar substances. Ionic compounds and charged compounds are more likely to dissolve in water due to their ability to interact with the polar water molecules.