Carbohydrate.
Not a polar molecule.
Glucose is a molecule that is a source of energy in the body as it is broken down during cellular respiration. It can also be stored in the body as glycogen for later use. Glucose can easily mix with water due to its hydrophilic properties.
Lipid
lipid
One molecule that fits this description is glucose. Glucose is a source of energy as it can be broken down during cellular respiration to release energy, it can be stored in the body as glycogen for later use, and it can mix with water to form a solution due to its hydrophilic nature.
Nonpolar molecules are generally not soluble in water because water is a polar molecule and like dissolves like.
yes it is soluble in water as we know from the common principal of "like dissolves like" in this case water is a polar molecule as well as the molecule in question therefore the molecule you specified will infact dissolve in water
No, carbon tetraiodide (CI4) is not soluble in water. It is a nonpolar molecule and therefore does not interact well with polar water molecules.
Iodine is not a soluble because its non polar and does not dissolve in water , it sinks to the bottom and turns the water a yellow colour.
yes it is becasue water is a polar molecule and therefore, can only disolve another polar molecule such as ch2o
Many alcohols are soluble in water because of the -OH group that they all contain. This is the polar part of the molecule which makes it polar and thus soluble in water. The part of the molecule that limits the solubility in water is the carbon chain attached to this -OH group. The longer and more branched the carbon chain, the less soluble it is in water.
S8, or elemental sulfur, is not soluble in water. It is a nonpolar molecule, which means it does not interact favorably with polar water molecules. Instead, sulfur is more soluble in nonpolar organic solvents.