NaCl is an ionic compound, certainly not nonpolar.
No, NaCL is polar, benzen is non-polar.
NaCl will not dissolve in Hexane because NaCl is a polar molecule and Hexane is a non-polar molecule. NaCl is insoluble in Hexane. On the other hand, NaCl will dissolve in water because both are polar molecules. "Like dissolves like".
NaCl is ionic, and polar/non-polar usually refers to covalent bonds. So, while it is polar in a sense (there are + and - parts) it is really ionic. It is, however, soluble in polar liquids, such a water.
Sodium chloride is highly polar (ionic in fact) where hexane is very not. The two don't attract at all, so each is insoluble in the other.
Salt is polar. It dissolves in water (also polar). Like dissolves like.
NaCl is an ionic compound, and these terms are generally reserved for covalent compounds. But by definition, all ionic compounds are polar.
Because NaCl is a polar, ionic compound.
No it is not soluble in toluene because toluene is nonpolar and nacl is polar
MgF2 and NaCl are ionic. NH3 and H2O contain polar covalent bonds. N2 contains non polar covalent bond.
NaCl will not dissolve in CCl4 is a polar molecule and polar molecule will only dissolve other polar molecules. As the same goes for non polar molecules.
No, sodium chloride (NaCl) is not soluble in dichloromethane (DCM). DCM is a non-polar solvent, while sodium chloride is an ionic compound that dissolves well in polar solvents like water. The solubility of ionic compounds typically requires a polar medium to facilitate the dissociation of the ions. Therefore, NaCl will not dissolve in DCM.
Water can dissolve NaCl because it has polar molecular structure which allows it to interact with the ions in NaCl, breaking the ionic bonds. Ethanol is a polar molecule as well, making it able to dissolve NaCl through similar polar interactions. Ethanol can also dissolve in water due to its polar characteristics and ability to form hydrogen bonds with water molecules.