Some are and some are not.
Some water soluble inorganic compounds include ammonia (NH3), sodium chloride (NaCl), and copper sulfate (CuSO4).
Some water insoluble inorganic compounds include silicon dioxide (SiO2), calcium carbonate (CaCO3), and lead iodide (PbI2)
In general, inorganic compounds are not very soluble in organic solvents. This is because organic solvents are primarily non-polar, while most inorganic compounds are ionic or polar in nature. However, there are exceptions where certain inorganic compounds may exhibit some solubility in specific organic solvents.
Inorganic compounds generally do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, while organic compounds do. Inorganic compounds are typically simpler in structure and have fewer types of elements compared to organic compounds. Additionally, organic compounds are usually associated with living organisms, while inorganic compounds are not.
Carbon is always present in all organic compounds, but lacking in inorganic compounds. Similarly hydrogen is always present in organic compounds but are missing in inorganic compounds.
Inorganic compounds are chemical compounds that do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds. They include salts, metals, minerals, and other substances. Inorganic compounds play critical roles in various industrial, biological, and environmental processes.
Being an ionic inorganic salt, PbNO3 is soluble in water which is similar in structure as methanol (CH3OH) but we must remember that water is inorganic in nature unlike methanol which is a typical organic compound. From our knowledge of organic compounds we may simply predict that lead nitrate is insoluble in methanol.
well, according to my own knowledge...fat is insoluble.. however, fat that has become liquid due to high temperatures are soluble in inorganic compounds such as ethanol or ether.. but i do not know why it is soluble in these inorganic compounds..
In general, inorganic compounds are not very soluble in organic solvents. This is because organic solvents are primarily non-polar, while most inorganic compounds are ionic or polar in nature. However, there are exceptions where certain inorganic compounds may exhibit some solubility in specific organic solvents.
Like dissolves like. So organic compounds are generally soluble in organic solvents whereas inorganic compounds are more soluble in inorganic solvents (though there are plenty of exceptions to this).
Soluble organic and inorganic salts
they are inorganic
All organic compounds contain carbon; most inorganic compounds doesn't contain carbon.
Organic compounds contain carbon bonded to hydrogen. Inorganic compounds do not.
Water, salt and ammonia are inorganic compounds.
Of its simple inorganic compounds, lead sulphate and lead chloride are insoluble in water, so would be in nitric acid, which is mostly water. Lead monoxide and lead carbonate are not soluble, but react with the acid so they appear soluble.
no it is not because water is too powerful.
Inorganic compounds generally do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds, while organic compounds do. Inorganic compounds are typically simpler in structure and have fewer types of elements compared to organic compounds. Additionally, organic compounds are usually associated with living organisms, while inorganic compounds are not.
inorganic compounds are any compounds without carbon present