KNO3 is potassium nitrate. It is an IONIC compound which dissolved in water.
CCl4 is tetrachloromethane, it is a COVALENT compound, which is misxible in organic solvents.
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
Carbon tetrachloride is not miscible with water but miscible with many other liquid organic compounds.
Both KNO3 (potassium nitrate) and NaNO3 (sodium nitrate) are soluble in water, but they may not be completely miscible if mixed in a high concentration due to differences in solubility and crystal formation. In general, they would dissolve in water to form a homogeneous solution.
No, benzene and carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are immiscible in each other. This means they do not mix or dissolve in one another in all proportions.
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
When two liquids are mixed, the term is miscible, not soluble. But yes, CCl4 is miscible in cyclohexane.
Carbon tetrachloride is not miscible with water but miscible with many other liquid organic compounds.
Both KNO3 (potassium nitrate) and NaNO3 (sodium nitrate) are soluble in water, but they may not be completely miscible if mixed in a high concentration due to differences in solubility and crystal formation. In general, they would dissolve in water to form a homogeneous solution.
No, benzene and carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are immiscible in each other. This means they do not mix or dissolve in one another in all proportions.
No, kerosene is not miscible with carbon tetrachloride. Miscibility of liquids depends on their relative polarities and molecular structures. Kerosene is a nonpolar solvent, while carbon tetrachloride is a polar solvent, which makes them immiscible.
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
1 mole CCl4 = 153.811g CCl4 = 6.022 x 1023 molecules CCl4 567g CCl4 x (6.022 x 1023 molecules CCl4)/153.811g CCl4 = 2.22 x 1024 molecules CCl4
No, CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride) is not commonly used as a solvent for dissolving oil stains. It is more commonly used as a solvent for cleaning metal parts or in chemical synthesis. For oil stains, you would typically use a solvent like acetone or a commercial degreaser.
IPA is miscible with petrol.
CCl4 is tetrahedral in shape.
The chemical formula KNO3 is for potassium nitrate.
Benzene is a nonpolar molecule as well as carbon tetrachloride, however water is a polar molecule. Based on the rules of solubility, "like dissolves like"; the attraction between nonpolar molecules have the same kind of interaction and strength but the attractions between the highly polar molecule of water are very different, therefore substituting these attractions for new attraction with benzene will require a greater change in enthalpy.