Yes, all phenols and naphthols (i.e., phenolic -OH group) are soluble in alkalis.
the solubility of naphthalene in water is about 30mg in 1L of water, so it is so called "insoluble" compound :)
Yes.
the hydrogen on -OH group of 2-naphthol is an acid one. It reactswith OH in NaOH to yield water, while Nais attracted by the negative charged -O-
No, 2-naphthol is not soluble in water. This is because it is hydrophobic. It is hydrophobic because its phenyl group.
Naphthalene is not very soluble in water. It will dissolve to the extent of about 0.02 grams per liter.
It is slightly miscible.
Go do your english homework first -.-
yes
No
Aniline is a base and forms salt with HCl which is soluble in water.
soluble
yes,it is soluble,as it makes sodium salt with NaOH.
Yes it is soluble because NaOH is nonpolar as well as Thymol being nonpolar
Methoxyphenol is a phenol derivative and so, is soluble in water. This means that methoxyphenol will dissolve in an aqueous NaOH solution, but will not react with the NaOH.
Aniline is a base and forms salt with HCl which is soluble in water.
no
soluble
yes,it is soluble,as it makes sodium salt with NaOH.
Yes it is soluble because NaOH is nonpolar as well as Thymol being nonpolar
Methoxyphenol is a phenol derivative and so, is soluble in water. This means that methoxyphenol will dissolve in an aqueous NaOH solution, but will not react with the NaOH.
Both being two polar compounds, aniline is highly soluble in acetic acid.
Yes, lactose soluble is NaOH. Sodium is Na always and is water soluble. The website Study Mode has many examples of experiments done to prove that lactose is soluble.
Yes
NaOH is an ionic solid i.e. it dissociates into ions: Na+ which is a cation and OH- which is an anion. Water is a polar molecule, so NaOH is soluble in water. However, if the water solution becomes supersaturated with NaOH and you keep adding NaOH granules, these will not dissolve.
In o-aniline phenol Intramolecular hydrogen bonding occurs which is not possible in meta and is responsible for less solubility
no, it is insoluble