Chemistry, asked by shreyap5631, 6 months ago

why oil is immissible in water ?

Answers

Answered by shreyash1505
0

Answer:

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Explanation:

Liquid water is held together by hydrogen bonds. (Liquid water has fewer hydrogen bonds than ice.) Oils and fats not have any polar part and so for them to dissolve in water they would have to break some of water’s hydrogen bonds. Water will not do this so the oil is forced to stay separate from the water.

Answered by peerbux363
1

Explanation:

\mathbb{</strong><strong>Answer</strong><strong>}

➡️ Liquid water is held together by hydrogen bonds. ... Oils and fats not have any polar part and so for them to dissolve in water they would have to break some of water's hydrogen bonds. Water will not do this so the oil is forced to stay separate from the water.✔️✔️✔️

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