NO, because sugar is a polar substance while kerosene is non-polar. Non-polar liquids will only dissolve non-polar solids.
No it isn't. Sugar in the petrol tank can still clog fuel lines and petrol filters though.
Sugar's solubility in kerosene is rather small or neglectable because kerosene is a nonpolar solvent, sugar is rather a polar solute.
Sugar is not soluble in kerosene.
No
sugar
60
No. It is a measure of how easily the substance dissolves. Sugar has high solubility in water. Sand has low solubility in water.
solubility generally increases on heating. so sugar cube in boiling water will dissolve fastest.
Solubility is when a soluble can dissolve in a solvent. Soluble=what is dissolved Solvent=what dissolves the solute. These are the parts of a solution. Think of sugar and water. pour the sugar into the water. After some time the sugar will have seemed to disappear. It hasn't but it did dissolve. That means it has good solubility. Now think of a piece of plastic in water. No matter how long the plastic stays in the water, it will not dissolve.
sugar
== ==
Temperature is directly proportional to solubility, which means that an increase in temperature will also increase the solubility. Sugar will dissolve faster in hot water.
sugar
no
60
The sugar solubility is increased.
Salt dissolves more easily than sugar, in my experience. But the solubility is similar. :)
No. It is a measure of how easily the substance dissolves. Sugar has high solubility in water. Sand has low solubility in water.
solubility generally increases on heating. so sugar cube in boiling water will dissolve fastest.
I would use the property of solubility in water; sugar is highly soluble in water and sand is highly insoluble.
it is soluble because it disappers in the water