Does this generally apply to polar solvents that don't have hydrogen bonds as well?
Non-aqueous solvents are complicated as well. And each one can be very different, it is very hard to give a broad explanation like water. A vast number of non-aqueous solvents behave as an acid or base (as does water) but it becomes more significant. You also have solvents such as carbon tetrachloride or cyclohexane which are non-polar, in essence nonsolvating and do not undergo auto-ionization. You also can have polar solvents, yet they do not ionize to any appreciable extent (Acetonitrile, DMSO). The polarity of these solvents varies greatly and has a huge impact on their chemistry. There is also a non-commonly encountered in undergraduate chemistry a class of solvents that are highly polar and autoionizable, such as bromine trifuloride. These are highly reactive though, many will react with silica containers as well.
Throw into that the vast difference in permittivity, it because confusing when you try and do math.
There are many books on non-aqueous solvents. One of these days I will have some free time to read up them and will, as it is very interesting. I only know detail and explanations of a handful of non-aqueous solvents; and in those I do not see a simple explanation of comparison. There might be, I just do not know it. Other then "chemistry man, chemistry".
Wow Enahs, did you just pull that off the top of your head, or did you have to go look it up? That's impressive to me if you can talk chemistry like that.
General Chemistry and Analytical Chemistry pissed me to hell off. My teachers were always expecting us to remember suitabilities (and not just easy ionic suitabilities like in this
chart I made to help people learn them) but also pKa's of stupid organic compounds. I was horrible at it. So in P-Chem we got to chose a topic to research and write about, so I chose that, as I wanted to learn why/what/when/understand. It turned out to be ~15 pages, lots of math, and great. More of a scientific approach to stuff and what I like.
It is only academic though. Gaining experience in lab using different solvents with different molecules, it quickly becomes intuitive based on "chemistry" (i.e. size, functional groups, etc) if it will be soluble in one solvent or another). There are always surprises, but generally experience is always correct.
I am gonna check your post more carefully later , however at first sight I think it will be to difficult to use your post enahs as a answer to this question for people that have alsmost no chemical background, knowledge.
I completley agree. Hence if you notice in the post before I typed it up, I said that trying to save my self work!
But there are various people reading this with various levels of chemistry, if it is useful to some great, if it just confuses others, bummer.