No.
Acetone and oil are generally immiscible, meaning they do not mix together easily. Acetone is a polar compound, while oil is non-polar, leading to a lack of attraction between their molecules and resulting in poor solubility.
Yes, mainly there are 3 types of acetone: regular acetone, acetone with enriched formula, maximum strength acetone.
Assuming the density of acetone is 0.79 g/ml, and the molar mass of acetone is 58.08 g/mol, you can calculate the number of acetone molecules in 330 ml using Avogadro's number. This will give you approximately 6.69 x 10^23 molecules of acetone in a 330 ml bottle of acetone.
No acetone is an organic ketone solvent.
To make a 50% acetone control, you can mix equal parts of acetone and water. For example, if you start with 10 ml of acetone, you would add 10 ml of water to make a 50% acetone solution.
When acetone, which is a strong solvent, is mixed with oil, they generally do not mix well due to the differences in their chemical properties. The acetone may dissolve some of the oil, causing it to break down or separate into layers. It's important to note that mixing acetone and oil can be hazardous, as acetone is highly flammable and volatile.
No, acetone is not a solvent for oil. If motor oil or similar, use gasoline first, then Goof-Off to finish.
Acetone and oil are generally immiscible, meaning they do not mix together easily. Acetone is a polar compound, while oil is non-polar, leading to a lack of attraction between their molecules and resulting in poor solubility.
acetone and mineral oil.
simply NO it would ruin the paints.
Acetone, Xyolene
Try acetone, butanol, trichlorethylene.
Crude oil has stuff like benzene, toluene, heptane and Octane in it. all those things are non-polar. polar and non-polar substances don't mix, like water (polar) and oil (non-polar). acetone is polar, but also non-polar due to its two methyl groups. So, yes. Acetone does dissolve crude oil.
No, it does not. It contains only oil products
Vegetable oil, which has atoms that share electrons equally, so that there is no charge difference.
No, because when you add acetone to acetone, all you are doing is adding more of the volume of acetone to acetone. You are just changing the amount of acetone, not anything chemically happening.
Yes, mainly there are 3 types of acetone: regular acetone, acetone with enriched formula, maximum strength acetone.