you taking online classes hahaha! im stuck on this question too!
In water, a polar molecule, the non-polar molecules are generally not miscible or soluble. Due to differences in polarity, they tend to separate rather than mix. This can be seen when oil, a non-polar substance, does not readily dissolve in water, a polar substance.
Water IS a polar molecule.
H2O is a water molecule, which is polar.
It makes the molecule polar
Because F-UC-K YO-U
In water, a polar molecule, the non-polar molecules are generally not miscible or soluble. Due to differences in polarity, they tend to separate rather than mix. This can be seen when oil, a non-polar substance, does not readily dissolve in water, a polar substance.
Water molecules are polar molecules. Both of the bonds inside the molecule are polar bonds.
Water IS a polar molecule.
Water is a polar molecule.
H2O is a water molecule, which is polar.
It makes the molecule polar
I will assume Hsub2O is H2O [water] Water is a polar molecule.
Water is polar molecule. Since oxygen has a higher electronegativity than hydrogen.
It is polar because it is asymmetrical
Water is polar and most chemicals are polar. The negative ends of the water molecule attract the positive ends of the chemical's molecules, and the positive ends of the water molecule attract the negative ends of the water molecule. This way the substance gets "pulled apart" from each other and mixes with water.
Water is a polar molecule because it has a slight negative charge on the oxygen atom and a slight positive charge on the hydrogen atoms due to differences in electronegativity. This unequal sharing of electrons gives water a polarity, making it a polar molecule.
water is a polar molecule. so it doesn't attract to oil (another polar molecule)