That's depend on the type of solvent
Non-ionic solvents, as organic solvents.
because organic solvents are flammable.
ethyl alcohol,ethyl acetate,diethyl ether,chloroform and hexane.
Sodium chloride is ionic and only dissolves in polar solvents- water is excellent. In non-polar organic solvents such as hydrocarbons it is insoluble but in polar organic solvents it has limited solubility, e.g. in methanol and tetrahydrofuran.
I believe that is not soluble in organic solvents.
Non-ionic solvents, as organic solvents.
In general, "Like dissolves like". So organic compounds will dissolve in organic solvents
organic materials dissolve in organic solvents inorganic materials dissolve in inorganic solvents
because organic solvents are flammable.
In general, inorganic compounds will dissolve in polar or inorganic solvents such as water, whereas organic compounds will dissolve in organic solvents. However there are many exceptions to these.
Christian Reichardt has written: 'Solvents and solvent effects in organic chemistry' -- subject(s): Chemistry, Organic, Organic Chemistry, Organic solvents, Solvation
ethyl alcohol,ethyl acetate,diethyl ether,chloroform and hexane.
The organic solvents are either acidic or basic and capable of producing protons and ions. These protons and ions changes the pH of the solution in which they are present. Once the pH is changed the amino acids cannot retain its original form. They tend to form either cation or anion which inturn alters the normal structure of the protein (enzyme) and hence the activity is also inhibited.
chemical property --> its pH, solubility in organic solvents, reactivity with acids or basesphysical property --> its density, temperature, color
Only some organic solvents have a hallucinogen effect.
Sodium chloride is ionic and only dissolves in polar solvents- water is excellent. In non-polar organic solvents such as hydrocarbons it is insoluble but in polar organic solvents it has limited solubility, e.g. in methanol and tetrahydrofuran.
yup!