but it is soluble. it dissolves quite easily in water - otherwise fish could not live.
Oxygen is more soluble in fresh water.
Yeah it is.
Carbon dioxide is more soluble in water.
The bonds between oxygen and hydrogen are covalent. Water is soluble. So the answer is YES - sometimes. It is not strictly the bonds that are soluble though.
Iodine is a dark purple element that is soluble. Sand is a compound of silica and oxygen that is not soluble.
Oxygen is more soluble in fresh water.
Oxygen is only very slightly soluble in water. Water in contact with air has about 8 mg of O2/L dissolved in it. So I would not agree that oxygen is particularly soluble in water at all.
Yes,
Yeah it is.
Fish and marine life are able to live because oxygen is soluble in water, including salt water/seawater.
Type your answer here... AS 4% oxygen is soluble in water.
Carbon dioxide is more soluble in water.
The bonds between oxygen and hydrogen are covalent. Water is soluble. So the answer is YES - sometimes. It is not strictly the bonds that are soluble though.
Oxygen is soluble in water to an extent. Fresh water will hold about 6 milligrams of oxygen per liter of water. It may not sound like much, but nearly all aquatic animal life depends on it.
Iodine is a dark purple element that is soluble. Sand is a compound of silica and oxygen that is not soluble.
Because nonpolar oxygen is has a much greater electronegativity and oxygen and water go well.
Water is a polar molecule, polar molecules are more soluble in other polar molecules. Oxygen helps make organic molecules more polar, and therefore more soluble in water.