Yes, water will completely dissolve HCl because HCl is a strong acid. The H+ ion is much less electronegative than the Cl- ion , so the Cl- ion pulls electrons towards itself in the chemical bond, and becomes very slightly negative. As a result, the H+ ion becomes slightly positive. Water is then able to "pull apart" the HCl because 0 is more electronegative than the Hs. The H+s from the HCl are attracted to the negative O of the water, and the Cl- from the HCl are attracted to the positive Hs of the water.
The answer is "yes; HCl will dissociate in water". The simple explanation for this process is because HCl is aqueous. Thus, it's cations and its anions seperate when in water. This is the exact defintion of "dissociation".
because it has more concentration of h+ ions, and in soluble in nature.
H20 readily dissolves HCl acid into an H+ ion and a Cl- ion. The H+ ion attaches to H20 forming H30+. This occurs due to the dipole-dipole action of water.
HCl dissolves in water on dissociating into its constituting ions.
Hydrogen chloride is easily dissolved in water.
Yes
No.
yes
Aniline is a base and forms salt with HCl which is soluble in water.
In water it forms a suspension that means partially soluble its solubility is quite well in a mixture of alcohol and water.
because HCl is highly soluble in water and forms hydrochloric acid henceforth it cannot be collected over water
No, HCl is a gas, though quite soluble in water (up to 720 g/L), which is called hydrochloric acid.
Why is not acetanilide soluble in HCL?
Sodium chloride is soluble only in the water solution of HCl.
Hcl
Clindamycin HCl is very water soluble, while only slightly soluble in alcohol.
water
Aniline is a base and forms salt with HCl which is soluble in water.
yes it dissolves in water to form HCl
In water it forms a suspension that means partially soluble its solubility is quite well in a mixture of alcohol and water.
because HCl is highly soluble in water and forms hydrochloric acid henceforth it cannot be collected over water
No, HCl is a gas, though quite soluble in water (up to 720 g/L), which is called hydrochloric acid.
Because, HCl (Hydrochloric acid) Is a VERY strong acid. It is soluble in very few things. Most things are soluble IN HCl. Not the other way around. The more acidic it its, the less soluble it is.
Why is not acetanilide soluble in HCL?
the solubility of ciprofloxacin in water is 0.35g/10ml ,and in 0.1N Hcl is about 0.25g/10ml that means solubility of ciprofloxacin in water is more when compared to 0.1N Hcl