Paper chromatography separates compounds based on their. A polar molecule has one end that is more positively charged than the other end. Blue dye is more polar compared to red.
This is so hard
Cool flame, yellow & orange
I would say backwards, mucin is soluble in water.
Yes. If it were not soluble it would not work well as bath salt.
Only slightly. Salt (sodium chloride) is not soluble in alcohol, but is soluble in water. Nearly all "rubbing alcohol" contains water. To prove this for yourself, pour a small bowl of rubbing alcohol, then add a teaspoon of salt. It will mostly remain at the bottom of the bowl. Now add water to the bowl, forming a miscible mixture of water and alcohol. After enough water is added, the salt will eventually go into solution in the mixture.
answering the question would be possible if there was a question in the first place..
water b/c it is insoluble in water. it is soluble in cyclohexane and sparingly soluble in ethyl alcohol.
Alprazolam is soluble in ethanol.
I would suspect iodine to be more soluble in alcohol than kerosene because iodine is a polar compound and so it alcohol. Kerosene is non polar. Now should you mix them? Don't think so! Iodine is a strong oxidizer and can react with the alcohol or the kerosene. This may likely cause a fire or explosion if conditions where right.
Cool flame, yellow & orange
Butanol has a short enough aliphatic chain that it is still somewhat soluble in water. As the length of the carbon chain increases, the alcohol would become increasingly insoluble in water and would be better suited for hexane as a solvent.
Starch is insoluble in water and in alcohol supposedly. Sugar is highly soluble in warm water and alcohol. A warm vingar (vinegar has a small amount of alcohol) soak with multiple strains (or a centrifuge if you have it) may easily do the trick. Personally I would water down the vinegar if it's a food preparation issue. Possibly also pure grain alcohol would be able to be evaporated out the starch at the end of the process if the vinegar left too much of a taste. Good luck, Isai Ani +.
B6 is water soluble not fat soluble. if you would look at a Lewis structure for it, you would find that it has multiple hydrogen bonds (OH) which makes it a water soluble. a fat soluble would be a non polar molecule containing hydrocarbon chains (CH3)
nitro
No, it is non-polar so it would not be soluble
I would say backwards, mucin is soluble in water.
No. ETG tests are extremely sensitive, and they test for alcohol metabolites, not the alcohol itself. Since ETG is fat soluble, it leaves the body much slower than the alcohol.
NO. Think of muscles as polypeptides, if they were soluble, then we would be a like a bag of bones in blood.