Generally gases are miscible in each other; sometimes chemical reactions occur.
Substances that are mutually soluble in each other are called miscible. This means they can mix and dissolve in each other in any proportion. An example of miscible substances are ethanol and water.
For any soluble substance, the ions of that substance have a stronger attraction for water molecules than they do for each other.
To find out the answer to this question, first you must understand about polarity. A polar molecule is one which has both: -polar bonds (ie. the intramolecular covalent molecular bond between both atoms are of different electronegativities, hence one gains a partially positive charge, delta +, and the more electronegative atom gains a partially negative charge, delta -). -the delta + and delta - centres to not coincide (and therefore do not cancel each other out) (need to know molecular structure to do this) Both of these mean that the molecule has an overall dipole (+ive and -ive side) Polar molecules are soluble (can dissolve) in other polar solvents. Non-polar molecules are soluble in other non-polar solvents. A polar substance is NOT soluble in a non-polar substance and vice versa. WATER IS A POLAR SUBSTANCE. Therefore, gases which are ALSO POLAR can dissolve in water.
When two materials are infinitely soluble in each other, it means that they can mix together in any proportion without forming separate phases. This indicates a complete miscibility between the two materials, allowing them to form a homogeneous solution at any concentration.
Immiscible gases are gases that do not mix or dissolve in each other. This means that when two immiscible gases come into contact, they will not form a homogeneous mixture but instead will remain as separate phases. An example of immiscible gases is nitrogen and helium.
Because they aren't soluble in each other and have different densities.
Gases naturally mix with each other when combined due to entropy.
No, acetic acid is polar and hexane is nonpolar, so they are not soluble in each other.
Substances that are mutually soluble in each other are called miscible. This means they can mix and dissolve in each other in any proportion. An example of miscible substances are ethanol and water.
For any soluble substance, the ions of that substance have a stronger attraction for water molecules than they do for each other.
Yes. Toluene and benzene are each soluble in the other. Neither is soluble in water.
Gases mix together when they contact each other. There are no immiscible gases like there are immiscible fluids.
No, vinegar (acetic acid) and oil are not soluble in each other because they are two immiscible substances. Vinegar is polar and water-soluble, whereas oil is nonpolar and hydrophobic.
Yes, triphenylmethanol is soluble in chloroform. This is because both triphenylmethanol and chloroform are nonpolar molecules, which allows them to dissolve in each other.
Yes, glycerine is soluble in hexane. Both glycerine and hexane are nonpolar compounds, which allows them to mix and dissolve in each other.
No, starch is not soluble in chloroform. Starch is a polar molecule, while chloroform is non-polar, so they are not able to dissolve in each other.
Yes, heptane is soluble in ligroin as both are non-polar solvents. They have similar chemical properties that allow them to dissolve in each other.