No, water is not considered an organic solvent. Organic solvents are typically carbon-based compounds, while water is a polar inorganic solvent.
Water is the solvent of sea water. It dissolves various substances such as salts, minerals, and organic matter present in the ocean, creating a concentrated solution.
Yes, alcohol is considered an organic solvent because it can dissolve organic compounds.
Yes, ethyl acetate is considered an organic solvent.
To calculate the required volume of the organic solvent for a 90 percent separation in one extraction, you need to first find out how much of the organic compound will stay in water after extraction. Since 10% of the compound will remain in water after the extraction (due to 90% separation), the mass of the compound that will remain in water is 0.1 * 2.7g = 0.27g. If 2.7g of the compound dissolves in 100 ml of water, then 0.27g will dissolve in 100/10 = 10 ml of water. Therefore, the remaining 90% of the compound (2.43g) needs to dissolve in the organic solvent, so we consider a partition coefficient to find the volume of the organic solvent needed.
Iodine itself is not conductive. However, when iodine is dissolved in a suitable solvent such as water or an organic solvent, it can form an electrolyte solution that can conduct electricity.
Water is the solvent of sea water. It dissolves various substances such as salts, minerals, and organic matter present in the ocean, creating a concentrated solution.
No, the solvent is organic.
It's not an element, but a compound that's called the universal solvent, and that compound is water. The strong polar nature of water means that it dissolves many polar covalent and ionic substances.
Water dissolves thousands of compounds (organic and inorganic) no one other solvent dissolves such huge no of compounds so it is known as universal solvent.
One way to remove salt from a water-soluble organic compound is through a process called liquid-liquid extraction using an organic solvent. By adding the organic solvent, the salt will partition into the solvent phase, allowing for separation from the water-soluble organic compound. Another method is using techniques like distillation or reverse osmosis to separate the organic compound from the salt solution.
No. Kerosene is an organic compound. and water is a non-organic compound. (kerosene : non-polar Water : polar). As water is a polar solvent kerosene is not soluble in it. but kerosene is soluble in ethyl alcohol which is a non-polar solvent.
Yes, alcohol is considered an organic solvent because it can dissolve organic compounds.
Acetone is a commonly used organic solvent for handling Potassium Fluoride. It is polar, miscible with water, and can efficiently dissolve Potassium Fluoride.
Oil and water do not mix; they are immiscible. This is because water is an inorganic solvent while oil is an organic solvent. Therefore, they cannot dissolve in each other.
water, ethanol, methanol, isopropanol, butanol, kerosene and
Yes, ethyl acetate is considered an organic solvent.
Gasoline is an organic solvent