Yes, to an extent of about one-fifth of the (high) solubility of lithium iodide in water.
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
Caffeine is more soluble in acetone then methylene chloride (CH2CL2)
sodium iodide
no. but its soluble in water and semi soluble in alcohol
Sodium nitrate is 'sparingly soluble' in acetone. That means it is insoluble, for all intents and purposes. The reason for its insolubility is that sodium nitrate is polar (ionic) and acetone is non-polar.
Because acetone may be polar but also non polar.
Yes, three salts of group 1 elements (Lithium, Sodium Potassium and salts) are soluble in water.
Lithium iodide
Lithium Sulfate (Li2SO4) is, indeed, SOLUBLE because the anion (SO4 2-) is soluble in an aqueous solution. Likewise, the Lithium cation (Li +) is soluble because it is located in the 1A family (or group), which consists of the Alkali Earth Metals, which are all soluble in an aqueous solution. Therefore, Lithium Sulfate is SOLUBLE.
LiIAdded:LiI is the formula of lithium iodide, often misspelled as '...iodine'
Pure isolated chlorophyll is soluble in acetone
Yes. Barium Iodide is soluble in water.
Lithium iodide is a chemical compound, not a mixture.
Lithium carbonate + Iron(II) iodide ----> Lithium iodide + Iron(II) carbonateLi2CO3 + FeI2 ----> 2 LiI + FeCO3
Lithium Iodide
No, it is not soluble in water
Polysaccharides are nonsoluble in acetone. Cold acetone can be used to precipitate polysaccharides to obtain an amount of dry polysaccharide sample.