QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- which liquid is likely to be a solvent for table salt (nacl)?
a. water
b. paraffin
c. both
d. neither
- which liquid is likely to have a higher specific heat capacity?
a. water
b. paraffin
c. both
d. neither
- if mixed together, would water and paraffin form a homogeneous or heterogeneous mixture? why?
Question 7
Table salt (NaCl) is an ionic compound. Water is a polar solvent, and ionic compounds dissolve well in polar solvents due to ion - dipole interactions. Paraffin is a non - polar substance (composed of hydrocarbons), and non - polar solvents do not dissolve ionic compounds. So only water can be a solvent for NaCl.
Water has a very high specific heat capacity (about \(4.18\space J/(g\cdot^{\circ}C)\)) compared to many other substances, including paraffin. This is a well - known property of water, which is related to the strong hydrogen bonding between water molecules.
Water is a polar substance, and paraffin is a non - polar substance. According to the principle "like dissolves like", polar and non - polar substances do not mix uniformly. When water and paraffin are mixed, they will separate into distinct layers, so the mixture is heterogeneous.
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a. Water