Hello everyone,
I have a couple questions about solubility, specifically for polar molecules. I am aware that "like dissolves like", but am having trouble understanding the gradient associated with this statement. Although it would make intuitive sense that molecules with larger ionic charges (i.e. Mg(OH)2 has Mg2+ whereas the ions in NaCl both have a +/- 1 charge) are more polar/soluble, the ksp values for many such molecules says otherwise. As such, I can't seem to figure out what determines the degree of solubility; is it polar charge, radius, electronegativity difference?
Likewise, would a more polar solvent be better equipped to dissolve a polar substance than a weakly polar substance? For example, both acetone and water are polar, but water is considered a much better solvent (in part due to h bonding).What characteristics about the solvent and solute will increase solubility?
Edit: I've read in a couple places that hydrogen bonding makes something more polar; however, this doesn't really make sense to me. I understand how a molecule must be polar to have hydrogen bonding, but I don't see how hydrogen bonding (an inter-molecular force) relates to polarity.
Thank you for the help