CuSO4 is ionic and water is polar. The types of bonding allow water to dissolve the salt much more easily than an organic solvent (e.g. alcohol, hexane) could.
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.
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.
Sulfur has low solubility in water, but it is soluble in organic solvents such as carbon disulfide, benzene, and toluene.
The chemical structure of phenobarbital is:The aromatic ring and methyl group will be more favorable for organic solvent, while the NH in the ring and O attachments favor aqueous solvents.One gram is soluble in approximately 1000 ml of water, and 10 ml of alcohol. Compared to other barbiturates it has a lowlipid solubility. It is very soluble in water, soluble in alcohol, and freely solu­ble in propylene glycol. In other words, the question makes an incorrect assumption - phenobarbital is MORE soluble in aqueous solvents than in organic solvents.
Alkyl halides are nonpolar molecules, which makes them soluble in organic solvents that are also nonpolar. In contrast, water is a polar solvent, and alkyl halides are unable to form strong enough interactions with water molecules, leading to their low solubility in water.
CuSO4 (copper(II) sulfate) is water soluble, while CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) is insoluble in water.
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.
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.
Sulfur has low solubility in water, but it is soluble in organic solvents such as carbon disulfide, benzene, and toluene.
Iron oxide is only soluble when placed in concentrated mineral acids. It is insoluble in organic and water based solvents.
No water soluble pepper is already organic.
water because quinidine is water soluble, being an organic substance used in the body and dissolved by a glass of water taken with the medication, whereas BaSO4 is not water soluble at all
No, water is not considered an organic solvent. Organic solvents are typically carbon-based compounds, while water is a polar inorganic solvent.
no. but its soluble in water and semi soluble in alcohol
The chemical structure of phenobarbital is:The aromatic ring and methyl group will be more favorable for organic solvent, while the NH in the ring and O attachments favor aqueous solvents.One gram is soluble in approximately 1000 ml of water, and 10 ml of alcohol. Compared to other barbiturates it has a lowlipid solubility. It is very soluble in water, soluble in alcohol, and freely solu­ble in propylene glycol. In other words, the question makes an incorrect assumption - phenobarbital is MORE soluble in aqueous solvents than in organic solvents.
chlorophyll is more soluble than xanthophyll
Baking soda is soluble in water. It can dissolve in water to form a solution.