Naphthalene is soluble in alcohols, benzene, ammonia, carbon disulfide.
pentane will be good solvent for naphthalene.
many oxinates are soluble in organic solvents eg chloroform
Na2CO3 is soluble in water and separated by filtration from a water mixture.Naphtalene is separated by heating when sublimation occur.
Substances that can be dissolved are called "solutes". Solutes dissolve in substances called "solvents". For example if you add salt into water, salt is the solute and water is the solvent.
The general rule is "like dissolves like", so nonpolar molecules are not usually very soluble in polar solvents.
pentane will be good solvent for naphthalene.
Solubility. LAH is not soluble in other solvents which would otherwise be appropriate.
many oxinates are soluble in organic solvents eg chloroform
It is soluble in water, as would be expected (the molecule has a dipole moment), so I would guess that it would be poorly soluble in nonpolar solvents such as hexane or carbon tetrachloride. This is just a guess though...
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.
Na2CO3 is soluble in water and separated by filtration from a water mixture.Naphtalene is separated by heating when sublimation occur.
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
the study of fat would fall under the category of biochemistry because fats are generally soluble in organic solvents
-Cationic dyes (basic dyes) are soluble in polar solvents such as water, alcohols -Nonionic Fat-soluble dyes line metal-free azo and anthraquinone dyes are soluble in aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons. -Metal-complex dyes are normally soluble in alcohols, ketones, glycoethers
Substances that can be dissolved are called "solutes". Solutes dissolve in substances called "solvents". For example if you add salt into water, salt is the solute and water is the solvent.
The general rule is "like dissolves like", so nonpolar molecules are not usually very soluble in polar solvents.
Nonpolar solvents are typically unable to dissolve polar or ionic solutes, as their molecular structure lacks the necessary polarity or charge to interact with these solutes. However, nonpolar solvents can dissolve nonpolar solutes, such as hydrocarbons or organic compounds with long chains of carbon and hydrogen atoms.