The Flourine goes Grey and starts to dissolve into the Iron Wool
Copper Sulphate will dissolve better in warmer water, it will dissolve both faster and it will be possible do dissolve a greater mass of the Copper Sulphate.
Small amounts of fluorine is good for human teeth and is in many city water supplies.
first dissolve in sulfuric acid and then add water
Fluorine reacts with water to produce Hydrogen Fluoride(HF) and Oxygen(O2).2 H2O + 2 F2 ----> 4 HF + O2
Fluorine reacts with water to produce O2. 2F2 + 2H2O -> O2 + 4H+ + 4F-
Fluorine is reactive in ways one can't really imagine. It doesn't dissolve in water because it reacts with water. Bubble some fluorine gas into water and two reactions will happen: 2F2 + 2H2O -> O2 + 4HF 3F2 + 3H2O -> O3 + 6HF If you bubble flourine into an excess of water, you will be left with oxygen, ozone and hydrofluoric acid...so do this in a polyethylene container, which won't be attacked by that acid.
F2 reacts with water to produce oxygen. In the normal sense of the word it doees not dissolve but undoubtedly some F2 molecules are present in the water for a brief period of time before they react.
fluorine reacts with water veryviciously the chemical equation for it is fluorine + oxygen = fluorine oxide
Fluorine+Water----Oxygen+Hydrogen Fluoride
Bricks are porous and will absorb anything dissolved in water. If there is fluorine present in water that comes in contact with bricks, when the water evaporates, there will be fluorine in your brick.
The Flourine goes Grey and starts to dissolve into the Iron Wool
- Sand does not dissolve in water- Plastic does not dissolve in water- metals do not dissolve in water
Yes, It Does Dissolve in water.
mixture dissolve in a water
No, but salt does dissolve in water.
No. Lipids do not dissolve in water.