The simplest way would be to use a strong acid to dissolve the metal. For example, HCl when added to zinc will produce zinc chloride and liberate hydrogen gas. Zn + 2HCl ----> ZnCl2 + H2
The strong acid might not contain carbon, oxygen or hydrogen.
Yes, atoms, as the building blocks of matter, can exist in water as individual units. Many atoms, such as hydrogen and oxygen, naturally interact with water molecules through various chemical bonds, while other atoms can dissolve in water through ionization or forming complexes.
Between H2O molecules. ( when hydrogen is covalently bonded to an electronegative atom)
no
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) is a polar molecule while toluene (methylbenzene) is nonpolar. Due to the differences in polarity, they are not able to form strong enough interactions to dissolve in each other. Hydrogen chloride is more likely to dissolve in polar solvents.
Helium.
The expression "like dissolves like" means that substances with similar chemical properties are more likely to dissolve in each other. This principle is commonly used in chemistry to predict how well different substances will mix together.
Acetone is more likely to dissolve covalent compounds. It is a polar solvent and can effectively dissolve other polar covalent compounds by forming hydrogen bonds. Ionic compounds, on the other hand, tend to be soluble in water or other polar solvents that can effectively separate and solvate the ions.
It is H2S [hydrogen sulphide] where the 2 is a suffix - something that this useless browser cannot handle!
The simplest way would be to use a strong acid to dissolve the metal. For example, HCl when added to zinc will produce zinc chloride and liberate hydrogen gas. Zn + 2HCl ----> ZnCl2 + H2
A non polar compound would be least likely to dissolve in water.
Copper is less reactive than hydrogen, so it does not displace hydrogen from dilute acid violently. The reactivity series shows that copper is lower in the series than hydrogen, meaning it is less likely to displace hydrogen in a chemical reaction.
The strong acid might not contain carbon, oxygen or hydrogen.
water is the universal solventthe solute is the substance that gets dissolved in the water.however water isn't always the solvent, but most often it isto answer your question no, the solute dissolves in the water which is the solvent
Yes, atoms, as the building blocks of matter, can exist in water as individual units. Many atoms, such as hydrogen and oxygen, naturally interact with water molecules through various chemical bonds, while other atoms can dissolve in water through ionization or forming complexes.
Ionic solids most likely dissolve in water because water is a polar solvent.