I believe so.
Resorcinol is soluble in water due to its ability to form hydrogen bonds with water molecules. The hydroxyl groups present in the resorcinol molecule can participate in hydrogen bonding with water molecules, allowing it to dissolve in water.
The molecule is nonpolar.
No, polar solutes are generally not soluble in nonpolar solvents.
Artificial flavors can be either polar or nonpolar, depending on their chemical structure. Some artificial flavors may have polar functional groups (such as hydroxyl or carbonyl groups), making them polar molecules, while others may have nonpolar structures, making them nonpolar molecules.
Molecules with many polar bonds are soluble in polar solvents.Also, molecules with none or few polar bonds (many non-polar bonds) are soluble in non-polar solvent. e.g Water is a polar solvent so substances with many polar bonds are soluble in it.
Nonpolar
Resorcinol is 1,3-dihydroxy benzene, it is acidic and two 'OH' groups make the system sufficiently polar so it is soluble in polar solvent water.
nonpolar
It is nonpolar
nonpolar
nonpolar
nonpolar
Polar
polar
nonpolar. The fat molecules in peanut butter are nonpolar, that is why peanut butter doesn't evenly mix with water, a polar substance.
Polar substances dissolve other polar substances, and nonpolar substances dissolve other nonpolar substances. A polar substance cannot dissolve a polar substance and a nonpolar substance cannot dissolve a polar substance.
The shape is trigonal bipyramidal and all the atoms on the outside are the same so the charges cancel eachother. Nonpolar