A material that will not dissolve in another is known as insoluble. Wax will not dissolve in water, rocks will not disolve in alcohol, and so on. Caffiene is soluble in liquid CO2 for example.
Differential solubility is a very powerful technique in process chemistry and also in analysis.
Teflon (polytetrafluorethylene) is a fairly inert substance, but starts to degrade above 200oC.
It is resistant to most solvents, but we used tetrahydrofuran to etch it in strain gauge applications. So its inertness is not absolute.
A non-polar substance will dissolve in a non-polar substance. Like dissolves like.
Sodium can dissolve. Citric acid can also dissolve into water.
"solute"
because the solubility is a propety of a substance and some substance will dissolve in some substasnce but no others
flour
A substance that does not dissolve is insoluble.
A hydrophilic substance will dissolve in water. A hydroPHOBIC substance will not.
A non-polar substance will dissolve in a non-polar substance. Like dissolves like.
When you dissolve a substance in a liquid you get a solution.
by the pelformane of the substance
it is a substance that can dissolve. lol i don no!!! xxx it is a substance that can dissolve. lol i don no!!! xxx
The "solute" is the substance you are trying to dissolve. The solvent is the substance you are trying to dissolve it in.
substance dissolve faster in a solvent? A catalyst can make a substance dissolve faster in a solvent. Increase temperature.
Like dissolve likes, therefore since water is polar and it does not dissolve, the substance is nonpolar.
Sodium can dissolve. Citric acid can also dissolve into water.
its an insoluble substance
You could stir the substance