Salt is polar. It dissolves in water (also polar). Like dissolves like.
Salt + Vegetable oil . The salt is the ionic solid and the vegetable oil is the nonpolar liquid
Table salt, or sodium chloride, forms an ionic bond. Ionic bonds are formed between a metal (sodium in this case) and a non-metal (chlorine in this case), resulting in the transfer of electrons. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between two non-metal atoms.
Sodium chloride is ionic, and therefore very polar. Isopropanol is a hydrocarbon, and is therefore non-polar. Like dissolves like, and polar and non-polar are opposites, so the salt doesn't dissolve. Water, however, will easily dissolve salt, because, like salt, water is polar.
Propanone (acetone) does not have any effect on salt because acetone is a non-polar solvent, while salt is an ionic compound. Non-polar solvents like acetone cannot dissolve ionic compounds like salt due to their different types of chemical bonding. The lack of similar interactions between the solvent and solute prevents any noticeable effect on the salt.
Magnesium chloride has an ionic bond.
Kerosene is a non polar solvent (or non ionic solvent) and cannot dissolve an ionic compound such as salt.
Salt + Vegetable oil . The salt is the ionic solid and the vegetable oil is the nonpolar liquid
salt is an ionic compound and gets dissolve in polar solvent as water,oils are non polar organic liquids.
Salt (sodium chloride) is an ionic compound; water is a polar solvent, oils have non-polar molecules.
No, table salt (sodium chloride) is a result of an ionic bond, not a covalent bond. Ionic bonds are formed between a metal and a non-metal, while covalent bonds are formed between two non-metals, where they share electrons. Sodium chloride forms as a result of sodium (a metal) losing an electron to chlorine (a non-metal).
Table salt, or sodium chloride, forms an ionic bond. Ionic bonds are formed between a metal (sodium in this case) and a non-metal (chlorine in this case), resulting in the transfer of electrons. Covalent bonds involve the sharing of electrons between two non-metal atoms.
Propanone (acetone) is a non-polar solvent, while salts are ionic compounds that dissolve in polar solvents. Since propanone cannot effectively interact with the charged ions in salt due to its lack of polarity, it does not have a significant effect on dissolving salts.
Sodium chloride is ionic, and therefore very polar. Isopropanol is a hydrocarbon, and is therefore non-polar. Like dissolves like, and polar and non-polar are opposites, so the salt doesn't dissolve. Water, however, will easily dissolve salt, because, like salt, water is polar.
Table salt is sodium chloride, NaCl; the metal is sodium.
Ammonia is polar.
No, baking soda is not polar. It is, however, Ionic.
Sodium salicylate is a salt formed from salicylic acid and sodium hydroxide, making it a basic compound. It is ionic in nature and polar due to the presence of charged ions in its structure.