Its molecular make up is neither completely covalent or ionic but it exhibits properties of both.
No, many substances do not dissolve in water.
Water is a polar molecule, and therefore dissolves other polar substances and many ionic compounds because of its partially positive hydrogen end and its partially negative oxygen end. However, petrol is a nonpolar substance and only dissolves other nonpolar substances.
in water sugar dissolves into sucrose (original post) Sugar dissolves in many substances, for example water, alcohols and cycloalkanes. (edit) this is true but I assumed the question being asked was what does sugar turn into once it is dissolved, which is sucrose, I shouldn't have stated just in water.
water, because of its polarity. This is caused by the oxygen molecule having a higher electron affinity, which means that the electrons of the hydrogen molecules more or less hang out around the oxygen causing the oxygen to be partially negative and the hydrogen ends to be partially positive. This is what is called a dipole moment which is why ionic (positive or negatively charged) and molecular (polar covalent) compounds are able to dissociate in the solvent(water).
The liquid that is the best dissolving agent is water. It is considered as the universal solvent because it dissolves many substances that are essential to life.
No, many substances do not dissolve in water.
Water dissolves many substances but its molecules have both a positive and negative side. Each part of the molecule can bond with the molecules of many other substances and create a new solution. This is the reason water is considered the universal solvent.
Water is only a quasi-universal solvent. The chemical and physical properties of water are very suitable for a good solvent. Water is not totally universal. Many glues don't disolve in water, but they do in petrol (gasoline).this is because water dissolves a lot of substances except oil,etc... likes dissolves likes, polar substances dissolves polar substances and most of the things here in the world are made up of polar substances.
You could mix it with water and see if it dissolves. The general rule is that polar substances and many ionic compounds are soluble in water.
Water is only a quasi-universal solvent. The chemical and physical properties of water are very suitable for a good solvent. Water is not totally universal. Many glues don't disolve in water, but they do in petrol (gasoline).this is because water dissolves a lot of substances except oil,etc... likes dissolves likes, polar substances dissolves polar substances and most of the things here in the world are made up of polar substances.
Water is a universal solvent.
Water is a polar molecule, and therefore dissolves other polar substances and many ionic compounds because of its partially positive hydrogen end and its partially negative oxygen end. However, petrol is a nonpolar substance and only dissolves other nonpolar substances.
Water...
Water is a polar molecule, and therefore dissolves other polar substances and many ionic compounds because of its partially positive hydrogen end and its partially negative oxygen end. However, petrol is a nonpolar substance and only dissolves other nonpolar substances.
in water sugar dissolves into sucrose (original post) Sugar dissolves in many substances, for example water, alcohols and cycloalkanes. (edit) this is true but I assumed the question being asked was what does sugar turn into once it is dissolved, which is sucrose, I shouldn't have stated just in water.
Water can dissolve so many different substances because water has an unequel distribution of positive and negative charges(polar molecule) which attract many ions and other polar molecules.
The substances that are important to living things and can be dissolved by water, a.k.a. "universal solvent," are easily soluble. The substances that are important to living things are most likely usually positive rather than negative.