Polar molecules dissolve in polar solvents (like water), and non-polar molecules dissolve in non-polar solvents (like CBr4). NaCl and HCl will both dissolve in water, and CH4 and C2H6 will dissolve in CBr4. CH3OH will likely dissolve in water as well. ---------- Methanol is soluble/miscible in water at all concentrations. It will likely also interact well with non-polar solvents like Tetrabromomethane. Keep in mind that methane and ethane are gasses at STP, but should dissolve well in Tetrabromomethane in the right conditions.
No, because their polarities are too far apart. You can circumvent this by adding a solvent that has a polarity in between these two solvents, e.g. ethanol, methanol, dioxane, dimethylformamide or dimethylsulfoxide.
Cool Aid Mix and water. Water and Oil. Vinger and Water.
Vinegar is already a mixture containing acetic acid and water. You can mix in more water and you will have a more dilute vinegar. We more often say that two liquids are miscible rather than that one is soluble in the other.
Merck Index states its miscible with water, alcohol and ether. Alcohol usually refers to ethanol.
Being miscible means that it can form a homogeneous solution when added with another liquid. Bromoform is immiscible with water. It is however, miscible with the chemical cyclohexane.
CH3OH is the chemical formula for methanol. Methanol is miscible with water in ALL proportions. It DOES dissolve or mix with water.
soluable means that the solid can diffuse in the water and miscible is the opposite.
Acetone and water are miscible liquids.
The term "miscible" refers to liquids that mix. Calcium silicate would be soluble or insoluble in water, and it is in fact insoluble (not soluble). But it does have a hydrated form.
yes. ethanol and water are soluble / miscible
The miscibility with water is very low; benzaldehyde is soluble in liquid ammonia.
The latter. C6H14 is a hydrocarbon, which is not water soluble; the molecule is non-polar. Whereas C6H13OH has that nice hydroxyl radical added on, which gives the molecule some polarity. Water, of course, is a polar solvent.
Yes, methanol miscible.
No, because their polarities are too far apart. You can circumvent this by adding a solvent that has a polarity in between these two solvents, e.g. ethanol, methanol, dioxane, dimethylformamide or dimethylsulfoxide.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water. For ethanol the term soluble is not so adequate: water and ethanol are totally miscible.
Phosphorus trichloride is hydrolized in water.
Yes, sodium chloride is miscible with many solids powders; also is very soluble in water.