Yes I though water was polar as well....
Anyway, thank you so much
Pwnage101 that makes sense.
no worries
So the alcohol is able to interact with the alkanes through the dispersion forces, which is something that water cannot do since it doesn't have dispersion forces.
no chemical species (molecule, etc) can
have dispersion forces [ it is a force between molecules, not a characteristic]. I would replace the bold in your sentence with
'is polar, and thus will not interact via dispersion forces'
there would still be dispersion forces due to the water however
incorrect. While i understadn where you are coming from, i think you do not have some of the basics of Chemistry that are learnt in Year 11.
when we talk about 'dissolving' a solute in a solvent, we are saying that the solute molecules will interact with the solvent molecules via intermolecular forces, so it does not stay separated (like water and oil)
now if i have say 500mL of water and 20 mL of oil, since the water is polar (very polar in fact), the water molecules interact with each other via hydrogen bonding dues to the permanent dipoles, from teh fact that O is much more elctroneggative than H, and the shared electron pair in teh covalent bond will be closer to O than H), which is the strongest form of intermoelcular forces.
Now the oil is non-polar, and so can only interact via disperion forces (which are due to temporary dipoles forming from the movement of electrons), which is the weakest form of intermoelcular forces
While you could argue that the permanent dipole in water could interact with the temporary dipole of the oil (remember that all bonding inc hemistry is due to an electrostatic force of attraction), the water molecule would rather interact with other water molecules, because they will interact via hydrogen bonding. So although the wtaer COULD interact with the poil, the interaction between them is weaker than that between 2 water molecules, and so the water molecules 'prefer' (if you will) to stika round each other, due to the stronger bonding between them
Thus the water would not interact via dispersion forces if it has the option of interacting via hydrogen bonding [excuse the personification]
comprehendo?