NaCl
LiCl and NaCl are solids; it is impossible to dissolve one in the other.
Sodium chloride and lithium chloride are very soluble in water.
Lithium chloride (as NaCl) is an ionic compound.
according to the theory 'like dissolve like',polar solute will dissolve in polar solvent because these solute will ionise and get dissolved in ionised solvent. NaCl---Na+ + Cl- H2O---H+ + OH- thir is not so with acetone which is non-polar in nature.
It is false; sodium iodide is more soluble than sodium chloride in water.
NaCl is not soluble in acetone.
It is a small difference between the electronegativity of lithium (o,98) and sodium (0,93) - for Li the value is higher.
Because it is a soluble salt
Sodium chloride is not soluble in ether.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is not soluble in benzene because benzene is a nonpolar solvent and NaCl is an ionic compound, which is more soluble in polar solvents like water. Ionic compounds like NaCl dissociate into ions in polar solvents due to the attraction between the polar water molecules and the charged ions. Benzene lacks the polarity needed to disrupt the ionic bonds in NaCl, so they do not dissolve in it.
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water. For ethanol the term soluble is not so adequate: water and ethanol are totally miscible.
This is the chemical formula of sodium chloride.