Question

Give reasons for the following:
MgCl2 is soluble in water but insoluble in acetone, while methane is insoluble in water, but soluble in acetone.

WhatsApp

Answer

MgCl2 is a electrovalent compound, so it is soluble in water (as water is a polar solvent and has a high dielectric constant) and insoluble in organic solvents like acetone (as organic solvents are non-polar and have low dielectric constant and do not cause dissolution).

Methane is a covalent compound and is insoluble in polar solvents like water and dissolve in organic (non-polar) solvents like acetone.

Was this answer helpful?

Didn't liked the above answer ?

Text Generation Tool

💡 Some Related Questions

Chemical Bonding

Fill in the blanks with the correct word from the brackets:
(i) The bond between two elements in group 17[VIIA] of the periodic table is likely to be ____ [ionic/covalent].
(ii) In the reaction of Cl2 + 2KI ⟶ 2KCl + I2 the conversion of 2I to I2 is deemed as ____ [oxidation/reduction].
(iii) The covalent molecule containing three single covalent bonds is ____ [water/methane/ammonia].
(iv) The molecule of water combines with a ____ [hydrogen atom/proton/hydrogen molecule] to form a hydronium ion.
(v) For formation of an electrovalent bond between elements ‘X’ and ‘Y’ which are a metal and non-metal respectively, X should have a ____ [high/low] ionization potential and ‘Y’ a ____ [high/low] electron affinity.

Open Answer »