Chloroform is miscible with ethanol, carbon tetrachloride, benzene, diethyil ether etc.
zinc + ethanol + water + chloroform + copper sulphate solution
organic solvent layer is violet
Uses of chloroform water
exothermic solution is the solution which liberates energy in the form of heat.
The solute is dissolved in the solvent to form a solution.
Water is a polar solvent while chloroform is a non-polar solvent. There is a popular aphorism used for predicting solubility which is "like dissolves like". Water and chloroform have different solubility. Therefore, chloroform is insoluble in water and will just form a layer when mixed. But in the presence of soap solution, they can mix together. Soap serves as an emulsifying agent that will reduce the surface tension of the solution.
No, they both are not miscible and is a heterogeneous solution
Chloroform displace iodine from KI and the solution become red.
try distilling the solution..
zinc + ethanol + water + chloroform + copper sulphate solution
zinc + ethanol + water + chloroform + copper sulphate solution
Chloroform (CHCl3), although it is polar, cannot form hydrogen bonds with water and thus the interactions between chloroform and water are too weak to be miscible. In addition, chloroform is significantly heavier than water and will form a bottom layer if mixed.
Sodium chloride is an ionic compound and gives free chloride ions in solution while in chloroform chlorine atoms are covalently bonded and can not move as free ions.
chloroform
organic solvent layer is violet
chlor o form
Chlo-ro-form, or Chlor-o-form