Yes it can. CCL4 is a non polar molecule meaning that it is miscible with other non polar substances such as oils. Because of this it will not mix well with water, just like oil.
No it wont because it is non-polar and hence cannot break the hydrogen bonds in water and get dissolved
CCl4 is a non polar solvent and therefore dissole ionic compounds
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
No, benzene and carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are immiscible in each other. This means they do not mix or dissolve in one another in all proportions.
ccl4 will dissolve better in water because likes dissolves likes, H2O is non-polar an CCL4 is also non polar where as ch2cl2 is polar(different to water) there for it wont dissolve in water but CCL4 will^^This is not true: water is polar. Therefore, since CCl4 is non-polar, and CH2Cl2 is polar, and like dissolves like, CH2Cl2 is more soluble.
No it wont because it is non-polar and hence cannot break the hydrogen bonds in water and get dissolved
CCl4 is a non polar solvent and therefore dissole ionic compounds
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
it will not dissolve NH3 in poler molecules
Iodine dissolves readily in CCl4 due to the presence of London dispersion forces between the iodine molecules and the non-polar CCl4 molecules. These weak intermolecular forces allow for iodine molecules to be dispersed throughout the CCl4 solvent.
When iodine solution is added to CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride), the iodine molecules dissolve in the CCl4 solvent because they are nonpolar molecules. This results in a solution with a distinct purple color due to the presence of iodine. However, there is no chemical reaction between the iodine and CCl4 in this case.
No, benzene and carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are immiscible in each other. This means they do not mix or dissolve in one another in all proportions.
No, you cannot apply oil-based stain over acrylic stain. Oil-based stain will not adhere properly to a surface that has been previously coated with acrylic stain. It is recommended to remove the acrylic stain before applying an oil-based stain for best results.
oil does not dissolve
Yes, Varathane stain is oil-based.
No, oil needs to penetrate the surface and the latex stain will inhibit that penetration.
i dont know how oil dissolve in oil