If you are looking for examples, here are some:
salt water
sugar water
sodium hydroxide dissolved in water
coffee
tea
The components of a solution are the SOLUTE and the SOLVENT. The SOLUTE is the substance that is dissolved. The SOLVENT is the dissolving liquid.
It is called a solute, which is dissolved in a solvent
A solute is dissolved in a solvent.
Yes because the solute gets dissolved when put in the solvent
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.
No; the solute is dissolved in the solvent.
when solute is dissolved in a solvent...the molecules of the solute starts diffusing between the particles of the solute.
A solute is a solid, being dissolved in liquid. A solvent is the liquid in which the solid, or solute is being dissolved in.
The "solute" is the item that is dissolved in the "solvent".
A substance in which a solute is dissolved is called a solvent.
The solute becomes dissolved in the solvent, while the solvent dissolves the solute.
A solution consists of one or more solutes dissolved in a solvent. The solute is the substance that dissolves and the solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute. Take salt water as an example. The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.