A non-polar substance especially the one that does not react with water... Have you seen a powder not dissolving in water? its possible. take some amount of sulphur and put it in water. it will be floating in water. wont dissolve.
Oil are nonpolar substances, and water is a polar substance. Because of this, water molecules are more attracted to each other than the oil, and will not break their bonds to dissolve the oil.
Some substance cant dissolve in water because they do not create hydrogen bonds with water molecules. It is very important for the substance to make hydrogen bondis with water molecules in order to dissolve. e.g. gasoline wont dissolve in water because it doesn't have a highly electronegative atom to react with posively charged hydrogen of water molecule. The polarity of the water molecule allows it to dissolve certain substances easily but not others which resist the "efforts" of water molecules to "wedge" themselves between the substance's molecules.
they cant dissolve in cold water so how would they grow ; they wont it is not possible only with warm water theyll dissolve but there still there
Oil is insoluble in water because it is a nonpolar substance, while water is a polar molecule. The polar nature of water causes it to form hydrogen bonds, making it a polar solvent. Oil, being nonpolar, cannot form these bonds with water, leading to its insolubility.
No it wont because it is non-polar and hence cannot break the hydrogen bonds in water and get dissolved
A Panadol tablet usually dissolves in water within about 5 to 10 minutes, depending on factors such as water temperature and agitation.
No, not all substances dissolve in water. Substances that are nonpolar, meaning that they don't have a dipole moment, will not be able to dissolve in water because water is a polar solvent. Only polar solutes will dissolve in polar solvents. Oil is an example of such a substance that is nonpolar and does not dissolve in water. There are also ionic compounds that are insoluble in water, such as silver bromide (AgBr), potassium sulfide (K2S), and lead(II) sulfate (PbSO4).
No, calcium carbonate is not soluble in sodium chloride. When calcium carbonate is mixed with sodium chloride in water, the calcium carbonate will remain as solid particles and not dissolve into the solution.
As A Matter Of Fact, They DO Melt. The Liquid Just Has To Be About A Degree Or Two Warmer To Melt It.
as temperature increases, so does solubility. try this with tea. try mixing a couple spoons fulls of sugar into cold water. it wont dissolve right? microwave it. now it will dissolve more. the hotter the water gets the more sugar it can dissolve.
When this substance is a solid, it is called ice. When the substance is a liquid, you can drink it to become refreshed. When the substance is turned into gas, it is invisible. The substance is water.