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A substance is considered more soluble in water if it dissolves easily and forms a homogeneous mixture with water. Factors like polarity, molecular size, and temperature can influence solubility in water. Generally, substances that are polar or ionic tend to be more soluble in water compared to nonpolar substances.
You can perform a simple solubility test to differentiate between sugar and salt. Since sugar is soluble in water, while salt is soluble in water and slightly soluble in alcohol, you can dissolve a small amount of the granular substance in water and in alcohol separately. If the substance dissolves in water but not in alcohol, it is likely sugar. If it dissolves in both, it is likely salt.
You have to specify the solvent if you want to know if something is soluble. Do you mean soluble in water? If so, significant amounts of oxygen, nitrogen, or any of the halogens are soluble in water. Elemental sulphur and phosphorus will dissolve in water. Several of the metals react violently with water, which is not exactly the same as solubility although it does result in soluble compounds - these include lithium, sodium and calcium.
The polarity of water arises from its asymmetrical molecular structure, with oxygen attracting electrons more than hydrogen. This leads to a slightly negative charge near the oxygen atom and slightly positive charges near the hydrogen atoms. Water's polarity allows it to form hydrogen bonds with other water molecules and other polar molecules, which influences its unique properties such as high surface tension, cohesive and adhesive properties, and its role as a solvent.
yes it is soluble in water as we know from the common principal of "like dissolves like" in this case water is a polar molecule as well as the molecule in question therefore the molecule you specified will infact dissolve in water
Yes, in chemistry polar molecules are soluble with other polar molecules. You know that water is polar because of it's structure. Two hydrogens are bonded the an oxygen. The oxygen has two lone pairs of electrons that cause the molecule to have a bent VSEPR structure. This creates a net dipole due to the high electronegativity of oxygen. Essentially, the oxygen is slightly negative and the hydrogens slightly positive. So, yes your polar molecule is soluble with water (also polar).
i want to know
No, Dettol in water is not a colloid. Dettol is a soluble liquid disinfectant that completely dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution. A colloid consists of particles that are larger than in a solution but do not settle out and cannot be filtered easily.
A substance is considered more soluble in water if it dissolves easily and forms a homogeneous mixture with water. Factors like polarity, molecular size, and temperature can influence solubility in water. Generally, substances that are polar or ionic tend to be more soluble in water compared to nonpolar substances.
Napo4 is soluble in water because all compounds containing alkali metal ions (like Na+) are generally soluble in water. On the other hand, most metal chromates (CrO4^2-) are insoluble, thus Nicro4 is not soluble in water.
Yes, yellow solutionDid you know that (almost) all Sodium salts are soluble in water?
I dont know but thats a good question
I think, no. We need oxygen and hydrogen to make water so with only oxygen and no hydrogen we would have no water and life as we know it cannot exist without water
The thing is, the iPod Nano 3 isn't out yet so we don't know. That pmao though
You can perform a simple solubility test to differentiate between sugar and salt. Since sugar is soluble in water, while salt is soluble in water and slightly soluble in alcohol, you can dissolve a small amount of the granular substance in water and in alcohol separately. If the substance dissolves in water but not in alcohol, it is likely sugar. If it dissolves in both, it is likely salt.
I don't know because my chemistry teacher is greedy
You have to specify the solvent if you want to know if something is soluble. Do you mean soluble in water? If so, significant amounts of oxygen, nitrogen, or any of the halogens are soluble in water. Elemental sulphur and phosphorus will dissolve in water. Several of the metals react violently with water, which is not exactly the same as solubility although it does result in soluble compounds - these include lithium, sodium and calcium.