How are polar compounds able to dissolve in water, but non polar compounds aren't able to dissolve in water?
The general rule is like dissolves like, so polar compounds will dissolve in water (which is polar) and non-polar compounds will dissolve in butane (non-polar). The water/butane are just examples - you can replace them with anything that is polar/non-polar, respectively. Why does “Like like like?” The attractive dipole-dipole forces between polar substances are stronger than the dipole-induced dipole attractions possible between polar and non-polar substances. Since water is a polar substance, polar and ionic substances are hydrophilic (“water-loving”). Non-polar substances are left to interact primarily with themselves and with other non-polar substances. Since they cannot interact as strongly with water as strongly as water interacts with itself, non-polar substances are hydrophobic (“water-fearing”). When mixed, polar and non-polar materials tend to form separate phases with minimal surface area between them. (Surfaces are often curved or spherical because a sphere encloses the largest volume with the smallest surface area.) Surface tension is another manifestation of the forces that keep phases apart. I googled your question, this is the math section sorry
Oh shoot, sorry. Btw, thanks.
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