hybred
no, in the case of polar and nonpolar the two do not mix it's like putting olive oil in milk
nonpolar. The fat molecules in peanut butter are nonpolar, that is why peanut butter doesn't evenly mix with water, a polar substance.
Yes, salad oil is a nonpolar substance because it is composed mainly of lipids, which are nonpolar molecules. This means that salad oil will not mix well with water, a polar substance.
because water is polar and oil is nonpolar
When a polar covalent bond and a nonpolar covalent substance combine, they may form a heterogeneous mixture where the polar and nonpolar components do not mix together. The polar and nonpolar substances will tend to separate due to their differing intermolecular forces.
Yes, polar and nonpolar molecules can form a solution, but they usually do not mix well together. This is because like dissolves like, meaning polar substances tend to dissolve in polar solvents and nonpolar substances in nonpolar solvents. In cases where polar and nonpolar molecules need to be mixed, special techniques like using emulsifiers or surfactants can be employed to create stable solutions.
Nonpolar
Polar compounds have poles that have a partial positive charge and a partial negative charge that attract other polar molecules. Nonpolar compounds do not have partially charged poles, so the polar substance is not attracted to them and they don't dissolve.
No, silicon dioxide forms a network covalent structure, and so doesn't dissolve in anything:
Yes they are mixing. but they are not reacting.
nonpolar
Water is a polar molecule with positive and negative charges that attract other polar molecules but repel nonpolar molecules. Nonpolar molecules lack charged regions, so they are not attracted to water and tend to cluster together instead of dissolving in water. This is why oil, for example, does not mix with water.