Yes, dichloromethane is miscible in water, meaning it can mix and dissolve in water.
Caffeine is more miscible in the organic layer (dichloromethane) than in the aqueous layer. This is because caffeine is a non-polar compound and thus dissolves better in organic solvents than in water, which is a polar solvent.
Two miscible liquids are: Alcohol and water.Sorry if this isn't what you wanted.
Dichloromethane is not very soluble in water, with a solubility of about 1.3 grams per 100 milliliters of water at room temperature.
Caffeine is more soluble in dichloromethane than in water due to differences in their polarity. When caffeine is added to the water-dichloromethane mixture, it is preferentially dissolved in dichloromethane, which is a non-polar solvent. This movement is driven by the principle "like dissolves like", where compounds tend to dissolve in solvents with similar polarity.
Bromine water turns dichloromethane to a violet color.
Caffeine is more miscible in the organic layer (dichloromethane) than in the aqueous layer. This is because caffeine is a non-polar compound and thus dissolves better in organic solvents than in water, which is a polar solvent.
Yes acetone and dichloromethane are both polar molecules so they are soluble in each other and form polar interactions.
Dichloromethane is not soluble in water. Dichloromethane does not have any functional groups or elements that would allow hydrogen bonding with water to occur. It is in fact a polar molecule but it still cannot dissolve a polar molecule like water because no hydrogen bonding can occur. Mostly only organics dissolve in DCM, such as hexanes and other hydrocarbon chains
Two miscible liquids are: Alcohol and water.Sorry if this isn't what you wanted.
Oil is not miscible with water.
Methylbenzene, aka toluene, is not miscible in water. It is miscible in organic solvents such as hexane and acetone.
Dichloromethane is not very soluble in water, with a solubility of about 1.3 grams per 100 milliliters of water at room temperature.
Alcohals are miscible in water and we cannot see anything after stirring it
Caffeine is more soluble in dichloromethane than in water due to differences in their polarity. When caffeine is added to the water-dichloromethane mixture, it is preferentially dissolved in dichloromethane, which is a non-polar solvent. This movement is driven by the principle "like dissolves like", where compounds tend to dissolve in solvents with similar polarity.
Bromine water turns dichloromethane to a violet color.
Water and ethanol. Oil is immiscible with either of those.
Water and ethanol are miscible, forming a homogeneous mixture due to similar polarities. Water and sodium chloride are not miscible as sodium chloride dissociates into ions in water. Water and oxygen are not miscible as oxygen is a gas and does not dissolve in water. Water and gasoline are immiscible due to their differing polarities.