Sodium chloride is not soluble in hexane.
A NaCl solution is a mixture. It has Na+ ions, Cl- ions and water.
Propane, being a GAS but an aliphatic hydrocarbon is soluble in cyclohexane, which is a liquid and a cycloaliphatic hydrocarbon. .
The constant solubility product is modified.
The saturated solution of sodium chloride is 379,3 g for 1 kg solution at 8o oC.
No, they would not form a solution.
NaCl will not dissolve in Hexane because NaCl is a polar molecule and Hexane is a non-polar molecule. NaCl is insoluble in Hexane. On the other hand, NaCl will dissolve in water because both are polar molecules. "Like dissolves like".
Sodium chloride is not soluble in hexane.
Solubility is the property of a solute to dissolve in a solvent to form a homogeneous solution. The rule "like dissolves like" is used in terms of solubility. Urea is polar while hexane is non-polar, thus urea is not soluble in hexane.
A 0.0% NaCl solution is a solution with absolutely no NaCl.
A NaCl solution is a mixture. It has Na+ ions, Cl- ions and water.
water is a polar molecule, hexane is non polar. substances with like polarities mix, therefore the non polar iodine mixes with hexane and not water
The volume percent concentration of hexane in a solution made by mixing 50.0 mL of hexane with 1.0 L of pentane is 4.8
for the conductance of electricity freely moving ions and electrons are necessary. But in NaCl (in solid form) Na positive ion and Cl negative ion are held together by strong electrostatic force and there is no freely moving ion in NaCl (in solid state) therefore NaCl does not conduct electricity in solid form.
If 10 is 10 molar for you, this is a saturated solution of NaCl.
Propane, being a GAS but an aliphatic hydrocarbon is soluble in cyclohexane, which is a liquid and a cycloaliphatic hydrocarbon. .
No, they don't react with each other.