Ethanol dissolves in water, as the polar ethanol molecules form hydrogen bonds with water molecules.
Ethanol doesn't react with bromine water.
The alkyne reacts with bromine removing it from the aqueous solution.
Bromine reacts with water to form a mixture of Hydrobromic Acid, HBr, and Hypobromous Acid, HBrO.
No!! Benzene wont de colourise bromine water although it is an unsaturated compound ,as it is an aromatic compound and it does not undergo addition reaction.
An ester , Ethylbenzoate and water.
The solution will turn the orange bromine water into a colourless solution
It will turn colorless because bromine is an unsaturated compound and unsaturated compound have double bonds
Bromine reacts with the double / triple bonds giving typically a colourless compound. the bromine water therefore fades as the bromine reacts.
The alkyne reacts with bromine removing it from the aqueous solution.
The unsaturated compounds having double or triple bonds under go the addition reactions with Bromine water, ethanol does not have the double or triple bonds
Bromine Water disappear thus forming Gluconic Acid
Bromine reacts with water to form a mixture of Hydrobromic Acid, HBr, and Hypobromous Acid, HBrO.
No!! Benzene wont de colourise bromine water although it is an unsaturated compound ,as it is an aromatic compound and it does not undergo addition reaction.
When D- glucose is treated with bromine water - it oxides the terminal aldehyde to carboxylic acid and the major product is gluconic acid.
An ester , Ethylbenzoate and water.
The solution will turn the orange bromine water into a colourless solution
As polyehtene is unsaturated(single bond) it does not react with bromine and there is no colour change.But bromine reacts with ethene and it becomes colourless.
Water, Ethanol, Bromine, Mercury, blood, urine, semen, tears, saliva, petrol.