Sugar doesn't dissolve in water naturally making it polar
sugar and urea are non polar but I dont know the reason
Sugar is polar.
yes
The structure of urea determines its polarity. The C=O portion of the molecule is polar, as well as the two N-H bonds on the opposite end. Therefore urea is a polar molecule. Refer to the related links for an illustration.
This compound is polar covalent.
Salt is much more polar than sugar. Salt is in fact ionic. Sugar is organic.
Sugars are polar covalent compounds.
polar, it's made of water (polar) and sugar (which is dissolved and coated with a shell of hydration)
The structure of urea determines its polarity. The C=O portion of the molecule is polar, as well as the two N-H bonds on the opposite end. Therefore urea is a polar molecule. Refer to the related links for an illustration.
This compound is polar covalent.
Sugar is polar whether it is in milk or not.
Urea is a polar molecule that readily / easily dissolves in the polar solvent - water. The term 'organic solvent' is used to describe the more powerful non-polar solvents, such as benzene, or carbon tetrachloride (dry cleaning fluid), that are used to dissolve non-polar compounds.
Salt is much more polar than sugar. Salt is in fact ionic. Sugar is organic.
Polar Covalent
Urea's polar because the bond moment is not null. another reason is cause the oxygen is more electronegative than amine bond (nitrogen and hydrogen)
Sugars are polar covalent compounds.
NO, because sugar is a polar substance while kerosene is non-polar. Non-polar liquids will only dissolve non-polar solids.
Milk is mostly water, which is very polar. Sugar (sucrose) is also a rather polar molecule. So, polar compounds dissolve readily in polar solvents. That is why sugar easily dissolves in milk.
Materials removed from the kidneys are urea and water sugar!
waste urea hydrogen