Oxygen is more electronegative than hydrogen and creates a dipole moment.
Water has a polar molecule, while oil has a non-polar molecule. Because of this, oil and water are immiscible.
A polar molecule
Water and oil doesn't mix because the water is a polar molecule and oil is a non-polar molecule. There will always be more molecules of water than oil.
No, that could be a phospholipid that you're thinking of. Water is a polar molecule.
a water molecule is polar because their is an uneven distributive of electrons between the oxygen and hydrogen atoms. the negative pole is near the oxygen atom and the positive pole is between the hydrogen atoms.
Because of its shape, water is a polar molecule.
It is polar because it is asymmetrical
Water has a polar molecule, while oil has a non-polar molecule. Because of this, oil and water are immiscible.
A water molecule is considered a polar molecule because of its shape. That is, its poles contain opposing charges, the positive and negative charge.
It's just regular old water. All water is polar because the molecule has a dipole.
Because the water molecule is bent, it is polar
A water molecule is polar because there is an uneven distribution of electrons between the oxygen and hydrogen atoms.
Water is a polar molecule.
Water IS a polar molecule.
Because the oil has a nonpolar molecule and water has a polar molecule.
A polar molecule
water is a polar, covalent molecule. it doesn't have an unsharing molecule. its also has to do with the 8 properties of water.