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Diphenylamine is only slightly soluble in water, but more soluble in polar organic solvents.
naphthalene is non-polar and can only dissolve in non-polar solvents. ether is non-polar, water is polar.
No, not all proteins are more soluble in non-polar solvents than in water. The solubility of a protein depends on its structure and the nature of its amino acid residues. Some proteins are hydrophobic and have a higher solubility in non-polar solvents, while others are hydrophilic and have a higher solubility in water.
Water is a polar molecule, polar molecules are more soluble in other polar molecules. Oxygen helps make organic molecules more polar, and therefore more soluble in water.
Water is a bent, polar compound and possesses the ability to Hydrogen bond. As a result, it has unique solubility characteristics as a solvent and functions differently at different temperatures.
Diphenylamine is only slightly soluble in water, but more soluble in polar organic solvents.
It does not make sense to ask what solvent would be more soluble. Solutes are soluble in solvents. In any event, carbon tetrachloride is a very potent solvent of non-polar chemicals.
naphthalene is non-polar and can only dissolve in non-polar solvents. ether is non-polar, water is polar.
Water is polar, generally like dissovles like, so polar compounds are very soluble in water more so in general than non-polar ones
No, not all proteins are more soluble in non-polar solvents than in water. The solubility of a protein depends on its structure and the nature of its amino acid residues. Some proteins are hydrophobic and have a higher solubility in non-polar solvents, while others are hydrophilic and have a higher solubility in water.
Ionic compounds generally are more soluble in polar solvents than in non-polar. Strictly polar compound is a term applied to compounds with a polar covalent bond
Halogens on their own are simple elements and are thus nonpolar. Nonpolar substances dissolve most easily in nonpolar solvents.
Polar molecules dissolve in polar solvents (like water), and non-polar molecules dissolve in non-polar solvents (like CBr4). NaCl and HCl will both dissolve in water, and CH4 and C2H6 will dissolve in CBr4. CH3OH will likely dissolve in water as well. ---------- Methanol is soluble/miscible in water at all concentrations. It will likely also interact well with non-polar solvents like Tetrabromomethane. Keep in mind that methane and ethane are gasses at STP, but should dissolve well in Tetrabromomethane in the right conditions.
my eluting in more polar solvents
polar, but be careful, because "glycerin" is nonpolar
Water is a polar molecule, polar molecules are more soluble in other polar molecules. Oxygen helps make organic molecules more polar, and therefore more soluble in water.
"Like dissolves like" This is simply stating that a solute will dissolve best in a solvent that has a similar polarity to itself. For example, a very polar (hydrophilic) solute such as NaCl is very soluble in highly polar water and and practically insoluble in non-polar solvents such as benzene. However, a non-polar (lipophilic) solute such as carbon dioxide is insoluble in water and highly soluble in non-polar benzene. For a non-polar solute such as carbon dioxide to become more soluble in water, the pressure of the system would have to be increased. This is why most sodas are under 5 atmospheres of pressure.