The word solvent is not adequate for gases.
Yes, gas can serve as a solvent, although it is less common than liquids. Some gases can dissolve other gases or solids and form homogenous mixtures. An example of a gas solvent is carbon dioxide in supercritical fluid extraction processes.
Yes gas can be a solvent. Butane can be used as a propellant and solvent in certain paint aerosols.
No water is the universal solvent
The solvent in natural gas is methane. It is the primary component of natural gas and makes up a significant portion of its composition.
The component which is most abundant in a solution is called solvent.
liquid in gas.
B. A solute and a solvent
Some solute-solvent combinations are: example (solute state-solvent state) oxygen in nitrogen (gas-gas) carbon dioxide in water (gas-liquid) water vapor in air (liquid-gas) alcohol in water (liquid-liquid) mercury in silver and tin, dental amalgam (liquid-solid) sugar in water (solid-liquid) copper in nickel (MonelTM alloy) (solid-solid)
The solvent in natural gas is methane.
Increasing the temperature of a solvent decreases the solubility of a gas Generally, increasing solvent temperature decreases the solubility of gases.
The solubility of a gas in a solvent is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas above the solvent.
the solvent is oxegenthe solute is argon gas
The word solvent is not used for solid-gas aerosols or for gases trapped in solids.
The solvent in natural gas is methane. It is the primary component of natural gas and makes up a significant portion of its composition.
No. Wikipedia: A solvent is a liquid or gas that dissolves a solid, liquid, or gaseous solute, resulting in a solution.Strawberries are not a liquid or a gas.
The solute is carbon dioxide gas and the solvent is water.
Dissolved nitrogen in water is a solute; when nitrogen contain traces of another gas can be considered as a solvent.
Solute- whatever chemicals are in the air freshener Solvent- the air
The component which is most abundant in a solution is called solvent.
Aerosol