yes
No Nu Gauze is plain packing strips, Iodoform is NOT plain! These are 2 different things! The orders are NOT interchangeable!
Iodoform is the organoiodine compound which is a pale yellow, crystalline, volatile substance and has a penetrating odor. Iodoform is very useful in things like gauze because it's very absorbent and promotes healing.
Iodoform is mostly used as an antiseptic and for wound debridement. The wound is packed with Iodorform gauze. As the gauze dries, it adheres to dead tissues. When packing is removed, the gauze pulls the dead tissue away, leaving healthy tissue. Since new tissue growth occurs first inside the wound, from the middle to outer edges, the Iodoform gauze helps keep the wound clean as layer after layer of new tissue forms.
Iodoform has the chemical formula CHI3; it is a crystalline solid, volatile, yellow, with a characteristic odor. Iodoform was used as antiseptic.
Iodoform is used in the iodoform test to detect the presence of a methyl ketone functional group. When Iodoform reacts with a methyl ketone in the presence of a base and acidic conditions, it forms a yellow precipitate of iodoform, which confirms the presence of the CH3CO- group.
Iodoform is commonly used as an antiseptic for disinfecting wounds and preventing infections. It is also used in organic synthesis reactions as a reagent. Additionally, iodoform has historical uses in medicine as an analgesic and sedative.
Iodoform is a disinfectant, pale yelow color.
iodoform
When iodoform reacts with phenol, the iodoform is reduced to triiodomethane and phenol is oxidized to benzoquinone. The reaction results in the formation of a white precipitate of triiodomethane.
No, methanol will not give a positive result in the iodoform test. The iodoform test is specifically used to detect the presence of compounds with the CH3CO- group in them, such as methyl ketones, which are required for a positive reaction.
The purification method used in the preparation of iodoform in the experiment is recrystallization. This process involves dissolving the impure iodoform in a solvent at an elevated temperature and then slowly cooling the solution to allow pure iodoform crystals to form and separate from the impurities.
no it's very very sparingly soluble in water .......iodoform soluble in alchol and chloroform .............