When a solid, liquid , or gas is dissolved in another substance, the result is a solution.
The process is called 'dissolving', provided the solid substance is soluble in the liquid solvent in which it is present.
In almost all cases, the phenomenon of one substance dissolving into another substance requires a liquid; if you put a solid object on top of another solid object, it is not going to dissolve. However, there is also a phenomenon called adsorption (different from absorbtion) in which a gas dissolves into the surface of a metal. So in that case, no liquid is involved.
The dissolution rate of a substance is affected by the surface area that can react with the liquid it is dissolving in. Powdering it increases the surface area so it increases the dissolving rate.
Dissolving is the chemical state in which melting is physical state but the difference is when you dissolve something some things can be brought back but when you melt some thing you are mostly likely not to bring it back to it's natural form
Actually, an insoluble substance does not have to be a solid. Think of cooking oil. It is a liquid, however, it does not dissolve in water. Hope I helped!=) -Razzi (Delilah Hope) No an insoluble substance can be solid, liquid or gas. However, trying to dissolve one liquid into another (mixing them together) is referred to as immiscible. Mostly insoluble refers to dissolving a solid or gas into a liquid.
The process is called 'dissolving', provided the solid substance is soluble in the liquid solvent in which it is present.
It's the solute in a solution - the liquid that did the dissolving is the solvent.
They break up into individual molecules (or ions) and diffuse throughout the liquid.
Dissolving is when something is gone. When you mix salt into water, the salt will eventually get smaller and smaller until it is gone. You say 'The salt has dissolved' when the element/compound is gone.
In almost all cases, the phenomenon of one substance dissolving into another substance requires a liquid; if you put a solid object on top of another solid object, it is not going to dissolve. However, there is also a phenomenon called adsorption (different from absorbtion) in which a gas dissolves into the surface of a metal. So in that case, no liquid is involved.
The dissolution rate of a substance is affected by the surface area that can react with the liquid it is dissolving in. Powdering it increases the surface area so it increases the dissolving rate.
A solution (from the verb to solve), is the answer to a question, problem, or disagreement.ChemistryA solution consists of one or more liquid, gaseous, or solid substances added to another, usually a liquid, so as to form a homogeneous mixture (a dissolving).
This is a base.
In almost all cases, the phenomenon of one substance dissolving into another substance requires a liquid; if you put a solid object on top of another solid object, it is not going to dissolve. However, there is also a phenomenon called adsorption (different from absorbtion) in which a gas dissolves into the surface of a metal. So in that case, no liquid is involved.
cavitation?
Sol.
because you are breaking apart either the dipole bond or hydrogen bond molecules within the substance