If it can be dissolved in water, it will have a charge because it will form freely moving ions, so basically, all molecules that are soluble in water will form freely moving ions, which are charged
diffusion
molecules are made from atoms not the other way round - this question is a little ambiguous and needs rewording. A molecule also does not have charge (not net charge anyway) - it can have a dipole - or be polar like water
It makes the molecule polar
there has to be a negative charge in the molecule as there is a positive charge. there is a negative charge and when it and a positive charge gets together it forms something that makes the charge neutral
Water is a largely used solvent because the molecule is polar.
when a water molecule gains an hydrogen ion from another water molecule
the sugar particles turn into ions which attach to the polar molecules of water Each sugar molecule does not become an ion. Each sugar molecule is charge neutral and thus has no charge. When sugar is dissolved in water, the water pulls the sugar molecules apart from each other and the individual sugar molecules no longer touch each other. Each sugar molecule is surrounded by water. The forces between molecules are responsible for this. The polar shape of water molecules is what governs the separation.
In water, which is a polar molecule, ions care surounded by water molecules depending on the charge of the ion. Positive ions form eletrostatic interactions with the oxygen in water and negative ions, with the hydrogens. Polar molecules are easily dissolved in water because they form hydrogen bonds, sort of the same principle behind the interactions that happen between ions and water molecules.
No, H3O+ is not a free radical. It is a hydronium ion formed when a water molecule gains a proton. It has a positive charge due to the addition of the extra proton.
It's not an ionic compound.
diffusion
molecules are made from atoms not the other way round - this question is a little ambiguous and needs rewording. A molecule also does not have charge (not net charge anyway) - it can have a dipole - or be polar like water
These layers of water molecules surrounding an ion or polar molecule are collectively called a hydration shell. The water molecules orient themselves around the ion or molecule to shield its charge or polarity, allowing it to remain dissolved in the water.
Yes, hydrogen phosphate (HPO4^2-) is a polar molecule. It contains both polar covalent bonds and an overall molecular structure that is asymmetrical, leading to an uneven distribution of charge within the molecule.
It makes the molecule polar
The water is a neutral substance but the molecule is polar.
Solute molecules can be positively charged, negatively charged, or neutral. For example, dissolving sodium chloride in water produces positively charged sodium cations and negatively charged chloride anions. Dissolving sucrose (table sugar) in water produces only dissolved neutral sucrose molecules.