When sodium chloride dissolves in water it does so because the positive and negative ions are attracted to the polar water molecules. Benzene molecules are not polar so there is much less attraction.
salt is soluble in water because water is a liquid which has large spaces between its molecules so the salt dissolves in it. while petrol and kerosene have enough molecular spacing for the salt to dissolve
Because sodium chloride is a polar compound and benzene is not.
Sodium chloride is a polar compound; organic components of kerosene are not polar compounds.
Sodium chloride is not soluble in kerosene.
Type your answer here... no
It is not necessary; sodium chloride is stable.
No that is not true. It is soluble in water.
yes it is soluble in water for certain limit..!! when the soluble capacity of the water exceeds beyond the standard value.. sodium chloride becomes insoluble..!!
Silver doesn't react with sodium chloride.Silver nitrate react with sodium chloride forming the insoluble silver chloride.
insoluble in chloroform
Sodium chloride is soluble in water; silver chloride is not soluble.
Sodium chloride remain in solution; lead(II) chloride is practically insoluble in water.
Calcium carbonate (insoluble in water) is obtained and sodium chloride.
Sodium nitrate is more soluble than sodium chloride; sand is insoluble in water.
For example the product of the reaction between sodium chloride and silver nitrate is the insoluble silver chloride.
It is soluble, like Sodium Chloride or common salt
Because sodium chloride is a polar compound and the components of gasoline are not.