Sodium chloride (NaCl) is not soluble in octane (C8H18). Sodium chloride is only soluble in water (H2O), methanol (CH4O), formic acid (CH2O2), formamide (CH3NO), glycerol(C3H8O3), propelyne glycol (C3H8O2), and ammonia (NH3).
No. CaCl2 will not dissolve in octane.
No, calcium chloride will dissolve in water.
2.430 moles CaCl2 x 110.98 g CaCl2/mole CaCl2 = 269.7 grams (4 sig figs)
It depends on what it's reacting with. If it's not reacting with anything, then CaCl2 makes...CaCl2.
There are 0.07871604895385 moles of CaC12 in 14.5g of CaC12.
1.46 moles CaCl2 (6.022 X 1023/1 mole CaCl2) = 8.79 X 1023 molecules of calcium chloride ================================
Yes, CaCl2 will dissolve in water.
Dissolve 111 g anhydrous CaCl2 in 1 L distilled water.
No, calcium chloride will dissolve in water.
Potassium hydroxide is a polar compound. Octane is a non polar compound. Therefore, these compounds would not be dissolved in each other.
Because sucrose is a polar molecule, it dissolves in water. This is understood by the chemical axiom "like dissolves like." octane is a completely saturated hydrocarbon and is therefore non-polar. Because octane is non-polar and sucrose is polar, sucrose does not dissolve in octane.
Octane is a liquid at room temperature (it's one of the main ingredients of petrol/gasoline). If you mean what will it mix with, the answer is any other hydrocarbon liquid such as hexane or heptane or nonane.
Substances that do not dissolve in water are called "insoluble" or "non-soluble." For water (a polar molecule), anything non-polar will not dissolve, including hexane, methane, ethane, propane, octane, oils, waxes, and plastics.
1 mole CaCl2 = 6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 1.26 x 1024 formula units CaCl2 x 1mol CaCl2/6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 = 2.09 moles CaCl2
Boiling and freezing points are colligative properties, meaning they depend on the number of solute particles dissolve in solution. Glucose is a molecular compound so it is one particle dissolved in solution. CaCl2 will dissociate into three particles in solution. There are three times as many particles present in solution when CaCl2 dissolves.
2.430 moles CaCl2 x 110.98 g CaCl2/mole CaCl2 = 269.7 grams (4 sig figs)
The name of CaCl2 is Calcium Chloride
CaCl2 → Ca2+ and 2Cl-