Put it in a beaker. Use a smaller beaker filled half way with ice and water and place in the larger one. It should be about and inch or two obove the mixture. Heat over a bunsen burner and the Naphthalene will deposit on the bottom of the smaller beaker.
Yes, KBr is soluble.
KBr is a type of salt.
KBr is the IUPAC acronym for Potassium Bromide.
None, unless there is metallic potassium in the reaction mixture. Assuming excess potassium metal is present then 14 moles of KBr can be produced. 7BaBr2 + excess potassium -----> 14KBr + 7 Ba
AgNO3 + KBr = AgBr + KNO3
- naphthalene is soluble in chloroform- potassium bromide is soluble in water- sand is insoluble
Add warm water to dissolve the KBr which is very soluble. This would become the aqueous layer and would be more dense and thus at the bottom. Add them to a sep funnel and decant. Evaporate the water off and you have the KBr. The remaining fluid in the sep funnel is npahthalene
for moisture absorbance nd transparrent to separate compounds
Yes, KBr is soluble.
KBr is a type of salt.
KBr
KBr is the IUPAC acronym for Potassium Bromide.
KBR - company - was created in 1998.
KBR Tower was created in 1973.
None, unless there is metallic potassium in the reaction mixture. Assuming excess potassium metal is present then 14 moles of KBr can be produced. 7BaBr2 + excess potassium -----> 14KBr + 7 Ba
AgNO3 + KBr = AgBr + KNO3