glucose,fructose,solid iodine,hydrocarbons
glucose and fructose
the non polar solute gets dissolved as non polar solutes tend to dissolve in non polar solvents than in polar solvents. for eg: benzene(non polar solute) gets dissolved in carbon tetrachloride which is a non polar solvent but not in water because it is a polar solvent.
A polar solute would be insoluble in a non-polar solvent. The rule of thumb is "likes dissolve likes".
Polar solutes are soluble in polar solvents. Non-polar solutes are soluble in non-polar solvents. Polar solutes are miscible in non-polar solvents and vice verse.
Yes, like dissolves like so a nonpolar solvent dissolves nonpolar solutes and polar solvents dissolve polar solutes
The rule means that an polar solute will dissolve in an polar solvent, and that a non-polar solute will dissolve in a non-polar solvent. For example, salts, which form ions, will dissolve in water, which is also polar. Salt, however, will not dissolve in oil, which is non-polar.
the non polar solute gets dissolved as non polar solutes tend to dissolve in non polar solvents than in polar solvents. for eg: benzene(non polar solute) gets dissolved in carbon tetrachloride which is a non polar solvent but not in water because it is a polar solvent.
a polar solvent dissolves a non polar solute
A polar solute would be insoluble in a non-polar solvent. The rule of thumb is "likes dissolve likes".
Yes, many organic compounds are non-polar and they solute only in non-polar solvents. Anorganic compounds are mainly polar and they solute in polar solvents.
Polar solutes are soluble in polar solvents. Non-polar solutes are soluble in non-polar solvents. Polar solutes are miscible in non-polar solvents and vice verse.
"Like dissolves like" This is simply stating that a solute will dissolve best in a solvent that has a similar polarity to itself. For example, a very polar (hydrophilic) solute such as NaCl is very soluble in highly polar water and and practically insoluble in non-polar solvents such as benzene. However, a non-polar (lipophilic) solute such as carbon dioxide is insoluble in water and highly soluble in non-polar benzene. For a non-polar solute such as carbon dioxide to become more soluble in water, the pressure of the system would have to be increased. This is why most sodas are under 5 atmospheres of pressure.
A non polar solute. remember, like dissolves like
Water is a polar molecule. If a solute dissolved in water is polar molecule, it will dissolve in water. If a solute dissolved in water is non-polar like oil it will not dissolve in water.
Most hydrocarbons are non-polar molecules. Examples include Toluene and Gasoline
Because it is an intermediate polar-nonpolar solvent
They will remain separate, or distinct, in forms.It will not dissolve - only polar molecules dissolve in polar solvents.Non-Polar Solutes and Solvents are a different matter.
F2 is non polar. Diatomic molecules composed of two of the same elements are always non-polar. Examples are O2 H2 Cl2 and N2.Nonpolar. No element on its own is polar.