Ethanol and water both have O-H bonds. So Water molecules make Strong H bonds with ethanol. Therefor these 2 compounds are immiscible.
Water and ethanol. Oil is immiscible with either of those.
If two liquids are miscible, it means they are capable of being mixed together in all proportions. For example, water and ethanol are miscible as they mix together. If two liquids are immiscible, it means that they don't mix together and they don't form a solution in some proportion. For example, water is immiscible with oil.
no
immiscible oil and water copper and cobalt
phase separation. the two solvents must have similar polarities and b.p.'s - no crystals would form...and if for some reason they did, they would be impure
Water and ethanol. Oil is immiscible with either of those.
No, they are immiscible.
If two liquids are miscible, it means they are capable of being mixed together in all proportions. For example, water and ethanol are miscible as they mix together. If two liquids are immiscible, it means that they don't mix together and they don't form a solution in some proportion. For example, water is immiscible with oil.
No, ethanol and water are miscible. For an extraction, you want two solvents that are immiscible (mutually insoluble). Standard choices for the organic phase are ethyl acetate or dichloromethane. For the aqueous phase, use water, aqueous acid or aqueous base, depending on the compound you are trying to isolate.
No way in hell. The ethanol will precipitate the bleach into salt and the gas oil will be immiscible in the solution due to the salt precipitation.
no
immiscible oil and water copper and cobalt
phase separation. the two solvents must have similar polarities and b.p.'s - no crystals would form...and if for some reason they did, they would be impure
No, wax and water are immiscible.
water is polar and the cyclohexane is not
Add 10 parts water to 90 parts 100% ethanol.
Immiscible, of course. Greasy stuff like toluene is not water soluble to any significant degree.