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No, it is not soluble in water. To be soluble in water means that the object can dissolve in water. Examples of soluble substances include salt, sugar and so on, while insoluble substances include oil.
Different types of powder
Sorry, the question in incomplete there are no suggested test substances. However; polar covalent compounds are very soluble in water.
Because the presence of even a small amount of impurities makes water a good conductor like pond water
Certainly, many ionic substances are soluble in water. Some are not.
Iodine is not soluble in water because iodine is nonpolar and water is polar. According to the "Like dissolve like" expression, nonpolar substances are soluble with nonpolar substances and polar substances are soluble with polar substances, but nonpolar substances are not soluble with polar substances.
yes The presence of impurities either on the surface or dissolved in it, affect surface tension of the liquid. Highly soluble substances increase the surface tension of water, whereas sparingly soluble substances reduce the surface tension of water. The surface tension of a liquid decreases with increase in temperature. The surface tension of a liquid becomes zero at its boiling point and vanishes at critical temperature.
This is not nessesory because most of the soluble impurities are minarals and minerals are healthy for our body.This why the city waterworks allow the soluble impurities
These crystals are residues from soluble impurities.
Ionic substances, for example, are generally soluble in water.
excess water and other water soluble substances ......
chemicals
water
salt
No, it is not soluble in water. To be soluble in water means that the object can dissolve in water. Examples of soluble substances include salt, sugar and so on, while insoluble substances include oil.
Different types of powder
Some hydrophobic substances are soluble in water (ex.: proteins).