Sodium chloride is an ionic salt, very soluble in water.
yes, its is very soluble
iodine is only very slightly soluble in water ( 0.03 g/100 cm3 water hand back data) this means solute-solute interactions are stronger than the solute-solvent interactions between iodine and water.
It may be a solute in water but it is a solid white salt.
Solute, because it is the minor component in the solution and it is what dissolves in the solvent. For example: Salt Water - The salt is the solute that dissoles in the solvent, which is water.
The sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent. Whatever is dissolved is the solute, and whatever the solute is dissolved in is the solvent. The solvent dissolves the solute.
It's the solute.
Acid or base is solute friendly.
Some components of coffee are soluble in hot water (and they are solutes), some components are not soluble.
I think it's called soluble. It is; I'll just add 'dissolution'.
the solvent is water and the solute is coco beans i think
The word you seek is probably 'solute'. A solute is the material which becomes dissolved in another substance. Sugar is soluble in water, and hence is the solute. In this example, the water is the 'solvent'.