Ethanol is a polar solvent. Ethanol will dissolve silver nitrate.
Yes.
Sodium ion (Na+) and Nitrate ion (NO3-). Also there are a few H+ and OH- ions that come from water, but their amounts are insignificant.
You can either dissolve Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) in Ethanol or react sodium metal with ethanol. The safer method is dissolving Sodium Hydroxide but it doesn't dissolve easily in ethanol so you will need to heat the mixture to almost boiling and stir constantly for a fair while to get it to dissolve completely. Also, the ethanol cannot have any water in it - it must be 100% pure. Sodium metal reacts much more slowly with ethanol than it does with water and is a recognised safe method of dispoal for small amounts of sodium, but you would still need to be careful and only use 0.5-1.0g at a time. Both methods should be done only in a fume hood/cupboard due to the gases and vapours produced.
Yes. Beeswax does dissolve in Ethanol.
Ethanol is a polar solvent. Ethanol will dissolve silver nitrate.
Yes.
Sodium chloride (NaCl or table salt) doesn't even dissolve in ethanol. So it just stays in there. NOT TRANSPARENT
Sodium ion (Na+) and Nitrate ion (NO3-). Also there are a few H+ and OH- ions that come from water, but their amounts are insignificant.
You can either dissolve Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) in Ethanol or react sodium metal with ethanol. The safer method is dissolving Sodium Hydroxide but it doesn't dissolve easily in ethanol so you will need to heat the mixture to almost boiling and stir constantly for a fair while to get it to dissolve completely. Also, the ethanol cannot have any water in it - it must be 100% pure. Sodium metal reacts much more slowly with ethanol than it does with water and is a recognised safe method of dispoal for small amounts of sodium, but you would still need to be careful and only use 0.5-1.0g at a time. Both methods should be done only in a fume hood/cupboard due to the gases and vapours produced.
I dont think it does :)xx ----------------------------------- The solubility of sodium chloride in ethanol is very low: 0,65 g/L at 25 0C.
Yes. Beeswax does dissolve in Ethanol.
Sodium nitrate is 'sparingly soluble' in acetone. That means it is insoluble, for all intents and purposes. The reason for its insolubility is that sodium nitrate is polar (ionic) and acetone is non-polar.
Yes. KCl will dissolve in ethanol.
Sodium Nitrate
Dissolve them in water and add some sodium chloride. The silver salt will form a precipitate (as silver chloride), the calcium salt will not.
Alcohol is a non-polar solvent and does not dissolve salt as well as water does. If there is water in the alcohol then some of it will dissolve.