The molar heat of combustion of octanol is 5294
no it isn't. Since the molecule has over 7 carbon atoms it will not dissolve. Also, the Solubility of octanol is really small.
Octyl Acetate
Its an alcohol called Octanol because of its 8 (oct) carbon atoms.
It should dissolve it fairly well, yes. Despite the hydroxyl group, octanol is still a lipophilic molecule so you'll get much better dissolution in a non-polar organic solvent than a polar one.
The molar heat of combustion of octanol is 5294
"Octanol is not the most energy efficient fuel. Butanol is. Octanol gives out 8691.34J of energy per gram. Butanol gives out 15521.21J of energy per gram" Please state your source.
water is polar and immiscible with the non-polar octanol.
no it isn't. Since the molecule has over 7 carbon atoms it will not dissolve. Also, the Solubility of octanol is really small.
You can use Isoamyl alcohol instead of octanol. both of them are anti-foaming agents and facilitate separation of phases after centifugation.
Assuming there is water present, I would expect the product to be a (roughly equal) mixture of 2-octanol and 3-octanol.
HCl and SO2
Octyl Acetate
Its an alcohol called Octanol because of its 8 (oct) carbon atoms.
1-octanol is an alcohol, so it has an OH group attached to the first C atom. (C8H17OH) 1-octene is an alkene, which has a double bond between the first and second C atoms. (C8H16)
It should dissolve it fairly well, yes. Despite the hydroxyl group, octanol is still a lipophilic molecule so you'll get much better dissolution in a non-polar organic solvent than a polar one.
The only intermolecular "bond" would be hydrogen "bonds". More appropriately, perhaps, one might as about the intermolcular "forces" in octanol. Since this is a primary alcohol, it will have hydrogen bonds (the strongest) and it will have London dispersion forces also.