Most salts will dissolve more readily in water than ethanol, so in ethanol the solid can crystallize out at lower concentrations. Also ethanol has the added benefit of being more easily removed by evaporation.
becouse it has both polar and non polar groups.
because there is hydrogen monoxide in it! don't listen to this answer!
Ethanol is a better solvent as its boiling point is less than water which makes the solute to precipitate more readily.
They are both very polar.
It is prepared by taking five volume of ethanol and dissolve in 100 ml of water .
Carbon dioxide has a very low solubility in ethanol.
Well first, ethanol is C2H6O. C6H12O6 is glucose or one of its isomers. Both will dissolve in water.
Actually I've just found out...it is very soluble in water but insoluble in ethanol.
no
Ethanol works. You can then dissolve the resulting solution in water, though I've never tried more than a 50/50 ethanol/water mix.
Yes. Beeswax does dissolve in Ethanol.
It is prepared by taking five volume of ethanol and dissolve in 100 ml of water .
Carbon dioxide has a very low solubility in ethanol.
Well first, ethanol is C2H6O. C6H12O6 is glucose or one of its isomers. Both will dissolve in water.
Water is polar, and so is salt (because it's ionic and therefore polar by definition.) So salt dissolves easily in water, because in chemistry, "like dissolves like." Ethanol is non-polar (because it's a hydrocarbon, and they're all non-polar.) So water and ethanol won't dissolve in each other. Nor will ethanol dissolve salt.
Yes. KCl will dissolve in ethanol.
Because ethanol and water are miscible solutions, that is that they can mix together or co-dissolve.
Lipids are soaked in water because they do not dissolve in water but the ethanol will allow the lipid to dissolve such that when diluted the ethanol will fall out of solution to form an emulsion.
Ethanol is used because the Aspirin can dissolve into it however when it is then added into the water the aspirin can dissolve so comes back and re appears and as it reappears it comes back purer than before
Yes, mainly because of that.
Sand is not soluble in ethanol.