no
It is not soluble.
No, NaCl does not readily dissolve in diethyl ether because diethyl ether is nonpolar and NaCl is an ionic compound that requires a polar solvent like water for dissolution.
Sodium chloride is a solute when is dissolved in water (the solvent).
The type of solvent that is best suited to dissolve an ionic or a highly polar solvent would also be highly polar, probably a polar protic solvent like water or alcohol.
The solution is saturated because it contains the maximum amount of solute (NaCl) that can dissolve in the given amount of solvent (water) at that temperature of 20°C. If more NaCl were added, it would not dissolve in the solution.
according to the theory 'like dissolve like',polar solute will dissolve in polar solvent because these solute will ionise and get dissolved in ionised solvent. NaCl---Na+ + Cl- H2O---H+ + OH- thir is not so with acetone which is non-polar in nature.
warm, polar solvent
Rub some of their solvent over them. Every glue except epoxy has a solvent.
We call a liquid in which substances dissolve a solvent.
Water is the solvent substance that dissolves in saltwater. Saltwater is a solution of water and salt (solute), where the water acts as the solvent to dissolve the salt.
- Sand does not dissolve in water- Plastic does not dissolve in water- metals do not dissolve in water