The bacteria breaks down the leafs and twigs into soil by a chemical solvent that it leaves on the Leaf to break it down. The name I do not know.
With periodic acid during the steps of staining slides.
This solvent is used to clean surfaces from polyester resins.
Liquid carbon dioxide (supercritical CO2) is used as solvent.
If a substance is dissolved in a solvent, distillation allows recovery of both the solvent and the solute.
No, unsaturated oils and fats (sunflower oil, olive oil) decolourise when reacted with bromine
Decolourise
I exactly dont know as why acetone is a good solvent but I know that oen of our labs had ethanol for chlorophyll extraction from the leaf experiment. It does take out most of the chlorophyll present in th leaf and it is commonly used in labs and either acetone or ethanol is used as a solvent choice.
it cant decolourise
The bacteria breaks down the leafs and twigs into soil by a chemical solvent that it leaves on the Leaf to break it down. The name I do not know.
Alcohol is a solvent: It dissolves stuff. The leaf is porous, full of holes. When the leaf is placed in the alcohol, the alcohol gets into the leafs, and dissolves the pigments in the leaf, probably chlorophyll, which is green. This will turn the alcohol green.
With periodic acid during the steps of staining slides.
Ethanol is an alcohol that can be used as a solvent.
This solvent is used to clean surfaces from polyester resins.
- It is used as a jet fuel - It is used as a solvent in solvent extraction of metals, etc.
The word solvent is not adequate for gases.
Water (H2O) is largely used as a solvent; but an universal solvent cannot exist.