due to more bond energy
Yes, but much less so than NaCl for example. --PhD in materials science.
Yes. AgNO3 + NaCl --> NaNO3 + AgCl AgCl will form a milky white precipitate, where as NaNO3 is soluble in water.
Yes. It's because the chemical composition of salt is NaCl. Na, or sodium, is ionic, whereas Cl, or chlorine, is covalent. These bonds separate in water, H2O, and thus salt is soluble in water.
B. Sodium Chloride- NaCl(s) means that a sodium and chlorine ion make solid sodium chloride, which has nothing directly to do with solubility in water. However, NaCl is soluble in water. The formula to show this is NaCl(solid) + H20 -> Na+(aqueous) + Cl-(aqueous) + H20 An easy way to remember what is soluble in water is that polar molecules dissolve in water, and nonpolar molecules do not. So since it dissolves in water, both water and sodium chloride must be polar, which is true for the following reason:
yes. When it is set for a long time in the sun, in a couple months (or year) the water will evaporate and it will leave behind beautiful salt crystals. That's science at work.
Because it is a soluble salt
NaCl is soluble in cold water but more readily soluble in hot water
NaCl is easily soluble in water; BaSO4 is insoluble.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water but not in organic solvents.
Yes, but much less so than NaCl for example. --PhD in materials science.
Sodium chloride is soluble only in the water solution of HCl.
Salt (NaCl) is very soluble in water.
It is false; sodium iodide is more soluble than sodium chloride in water.
1. Put the mixture in water and stir. 2. AgCl is not soluble, NaCl is soluble. 3. After filtering NaCl passes in solution and AgCl remain on the filter.
Table salt, or NaCl (Sodium Chloride) will dissolve in water.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water. For ethanol the term soluble is not so adequate: water and ethanol are totally miscible.
Sodium chloride and water are polar compounds. Iodine is soluble in nonpolar organic solvents.