Polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood).
Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below.
Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.
polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood).
Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below.
Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.
No. Chloroform is a NON polar solvent.
Because you're living in some alternate universe where the rules of physics are different; chloroform is polar. Carbon tetrachloride is non-polar because of its symmetry (there's no net polarity to the molecule because all the individual polar bonds cancel out) but this is not true for chloroform.
ChCl3 is a polar compound. There are polar and non polar bonds.
Yes. chloroform is polar molecule
polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood). Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below. Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.
No. Chloroform is a NON polar solvent.
Because you're living in some alternate universe where the rules of physics are different; chloroform is polar. Carbon tetrachloride is non-polar because of its symmetry (there's no net polarity to the molecule because all the individual polar bonds cancel out) but this is not true for chloroform.
ChCl3 is a polar compound. There are polar and non polar bonds.
non polar solvents eg: Ether,.....etc
Yes. chloroform is polar molecule
polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood). Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below. Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.
polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood). Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below. Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.
Yes. the dipole moments cancel each other out in the tetrahedral arrangement
yes toluence is more polar than chloroform
I think you have a typo in your molecular formula but CH3Cl is a polar molecule and CCL4 is a non-polar molecule
Chloroform is not a acid. It is a polar compound.
polar molecules are water soluble , non-polar molecules are fat soluble . Chloroform (as are most anesthetics) is more soluble in fats (the cell membrane) than in water (ie.blood). Thus it is classified as non-polar notwithstanding the data below. Chloroform is a polar molecule. The 3 chlorine atoms are considerably more electronegative than the hydrogen atom, so the molecule has a net dipole moment.