It is because t-butyl alcohol forms an intra-molecular hydrogen bonding i. e. while t-butyl alcohol does not.
starch is insoluble whereas glucose is soluble
The BaSO4 (barium sulfate) will precipitate out of solution because it is insoluble, whereas the KCl2 is soluble and will remain dissolved. The balanced equation is: K2SO4 + BaCl2 -----> 2KCl + BaSO4
Classification of any substance as solute and solvent is not possible until it is being used along with other substance/s . The substance present in the largest quantity is solvent whereas substances present in smaller quantity which are able to get dissolved in the solvent are solute.
Glycine intracts with one mole of Bezoyl chloride in the presence of 10% (w/v) solution to yield hippuric acid with the elimination of one mole of hydrochloric acid. The excess of 10% NaOH solution serves two purposes, first; to remove unreacted benzoyl chloride. The NaOH solution hydrolyses the excess of benzoyl chloride present in reaction mixture, thereby resulting in formation of sodium chloride and sodium benzoate, which being water soluble remains in solution. Secondly the hydrochloric acid eliminated reacts with NaOH to yield NaCl. Both sodium benzoate and sodium chloride are water soluble, whereas the desired product hippuric acid being insoluble may be separated easily.
depends which chloride you're on about...phosphorus penta chloride is PCl5 whereas phosphorus trichloride is PCl3
starch is insoluble whereas glucose is soluble
The BaSO4 (barium sulfate) will precipitate out of solution because it is insoluble, whereas the KCl2 is soluble and will remain dissolved. The balanced equation is: K2SO4 + BaCl2 -----> 2KCl + BaSO4
Because carbon disulfide is a non-polar solvent sodium chloride is not soluble.
Sodium chloride is moderately soluble in water, ~37 g / 100mL whereas silver chloride is not very soluble in water.Take the mixture of sodium chloride and silver chloride and shake or stir well with water;filter;rinse the sediment;This sediment is the silver chloride.To retrieve the sodium chloride:evaporate the water.
By soluble I presume you mean soluble in water and, in that case, the answer is, some are and some are not. For example, Ferric Oxide Fe2O3, usually known as rust, is not soluble in water, whereas Sodium Chloride NaCl, usually known as table salt, is soluble in water.
p-nitro phenol has a symmetric structure as compare to o-nitro phenol so it has higher dipole moment or polarity so is more soluble.
The effect of solutes on solution is that they make the solution reach saturation point when added in excess. The soluble solutes dissolve in the solution whereas the insoluble solutes do not dissolve in the solution.
Classification of any substance as solute and solvent is not possible until it is being used along with other substance/s . The substance present in the largest quantity is solvent whereas substances present in smaller quantity which are able to get dissolved in the solvent are solute.
Glycine intracts with one mole of Bezoyl chloride in the presence of 10% (w/v) solution to yield hippuric acid with the elimination of one mole of hydrochloric acid. The excess of 10% NaOH solution serves two purposes, first; to remove unreacted benzoyl chloride. The NaOH solution hydrolyses the excess of benzoyl chloride present in reaction mixture, thereby resulting in formation of sodium chloride and sodium benzoate, which being water soluble remains in solution. Secondly the hydrochloric acid eliminated reacts with NaOH to yield NaCl. Both sodium benzoate and sodium chloride are water soluble, whereas the desired product hippuric acid being insoluble may be separated easily.
• Precipitation is settling down of insoluble particles from a solution. Co-precipitation is a process in which normally soluble compounds are carried out of solution by a precipitate. • In precipitation, normally insoluble compounds are precipitated. But in co-precipitation normally soluble compounds are precipitated. • Co-precipitation incorporates contaminants into the precipitate, whereas precipitation can result in both pure and contaminated precipitates.
Fe2(CO3)3(s). Carbonate compounds are notoriously insoluble, whereas K+ and NO3- are almost always soluble with everything. That is why a carbonate precipitate forms.
selective solubility is a separation technique toremove a compound of a mixture. one of the compounds is highly soluble in the medium, whereas the other compound(s) are insoluble. in such a way the compound requested can be removed and purified