Boiling off the solvent to vapour if the solute is not too volatile.
the liquid that floats has lesser density as compared to the other liquid and also it might be floating because it cannot be dissolved in the other liquid
In a solution, the substance present in the largest amount is considered the solvent, and the other(s) is/are considered the solute(s). Example: 1 ml ethanol + 2 ml H2O: water is the solvent and ethanol is the solute. 1 ml H2O + 2 ml ethanol: ethanol is the solvent and H2O is the solute.
When a solute is mixed with a solvent, a solution will result. The solute wll dissolve in the solvent. It might be wise to avoid saying "mixture" when talking about solvents because a mixture and a solution are each valid terms, and one is markedly different from the other.
That is called a saturated solution. It has reached a point where it can no longer dissolve any more solute (thing to be dissolved) in the solvent.This is more info you might find interesting:Keep in mind compounds dissolve at different rates in solvent. This rate is dependent on heat; goes faster with more. To be sure its not the dissolve rate but saturation you'll need to give it time. Of course a quick fix for a saturated solution is to add more solvent.Unless the goal is to be saturated, like in hand warmers. An example of a super saturated solution. Crystal sodium acetate trihydrate is dissolved in water until the saturation point. It is heated to force more to dissolve and then is allowed to cool down. Once it has cooled the sodium acetate (NaOAc) is still dissolved in solution but is now unstable and easily recrystallized. If even a single crystal more NaOAc is added the entire solution will recrystallize. This recrystallization actually has a surprising effect. It produces heat as an exothermic reaction. That is why this property is used in hand warmers.
i think it is called precipitate :)
"Melting". Some might consider "dissolution" as an alternative answer, if the solid can be recovered from the solution by evaporation of the solvent alone.
the liquid that floats has lesser density as compared to the other liquid and also it might be floating because it cannot be dissolved in the other liquid
I think it might be solution? :>}
A non-electrolyte solution is one in which there are no charged particles dissolved in the solution.For example:Sodium chloride will form an electrolyte solution in water because the sodium ions and chloride ions dissociate when dissolved in water.NaCl(s) + H2O --> Na(aq)++ Cl(aq)-Sucrose will form a non-electrolyte solution in water because no charged particles will dissociate in the solution.C12H22O11(s) + H2O --> C12H22O11(aq)The sucrose is not chemically changed, it's just dissolved in the water, forming a sucrose solution.*(aq) means aqueous (dissolved in water)
The broken container of green liquid is called the "fuel rod" and powers the saucer. The only other device that might contain one if the captured robot in the dungeon.(see solution at related question)
When they put liquid in your arm at the hospital, it is called a saline flush. It might also be called an IV.
In a solution, the substance present in the largest amount is considered the solvent, and the other(s) is/are considered the solute(s). Example: 1 ml ethanol + 2 ml H2O: water is the solvent and ethanol is the solute. 1 ml H2O + 2 ml ethanol: ethanol is the solvent and H2O is the solute.
There are no "solids" because they're all in solution; the closest you might come is the membranes of the various blood cells, and/or the (temporarily) unconnected fat molecules that are normally fastened to various transport proteins.
No, a solution does not have to be a liquid. A solution can be a mixture of any two substances without chemically reacting to each other. The substance of which there is more is the solvent, and everything else in the solution is called solute. Another common solution is the air in the atmosphere, of which nitrogen is the solvent and oxygen, carbon dioxide, ozone, and every other gas in the atmosphere is solute.
When a solute is mixed with a solvent, a solution will result. The solute wll dissolve in the solvent. It might be wise to avoid saying "mixture" when talking about solvents because a mixture and a solution are each valid terms, and one is markedly different from the other.
When a solid is formed from two liquids, that is called a precipitate.
That is called a saturated solution. It has reached a point where it can no longer dissolve any more solute (thing to be dissolved) in the solvent.This is more info you might find interesting:Keep in mind compounds dissolve at different rates in solvent. This rate is dependent on heat; goes faster with more. To be sure its not the dissolve rate but saturation you'll need to give it time. Of course a quick fix for a saturated solution is to add more solvent.Unless the goal is to be saturated, like in hand warmers. An example of a super saturated solution. Crystal sodium acetate trihydrate is dissolved in water until the saturation point. It is heated to force more to dissolve and then is allowed to cool down. Once it has cooled the sodium acetate (NaOAc) is still dissolved in solution but is now unstable and easily recrystallized. If even a single crystal more NaOAc is added the entire solution will recrystallize. This recrystallization actually has a surprising effect. It produces heat as an exothermic reaction. That is why this property is used in hand warmers.