Chemistry, asked by hemantnarula88811, 10 months ago

Why is an organic compound fused with sodium in lassaigne's test?

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Answered by KeshavGiri79
0

Answer:

sodium used in lassaigne's test- because of electropostive nature and in order to convert covalent form to ionic form it is quite reactive . ... In order to detect them, these have to be converted into their ionic forms. This is done by fusing the organic compound with sodium metal.

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