The mints will have a natural saturation amount. If you add a mint to one glass of water, it will have the same effects as if you added a gallon of water. The only difference is if you were to heat the water, or shake the water while the mints are in it.
Mints generally dissolve in water that is at or above room temperature, around 70-80°F (21-27°C). The higher the temperature of the water, the faster the mints will dissolve.
lt water because slat melts things faster even tho some water has salt in it
Mints dissolve in Sprite due to a chemical reaction between the carbon dioxide in the soda and the surface of the mint. This reaction creates bubbles of gas on the mint surface, causing it to break down and dissolve faster than in water.
You can make salt dissolve faster in water by stirring the solution, heating the water slightly (not boiling), or crushing the salt into smaller particles before adding it to the water. These methods increase the surface area of the salt particles in contact with the water, allowing for quicker dissolution.
2 days
Heat the water.
water
Probably hot water.
They dissolve faster in hot water.
salt dissolve faster in hot water
Solid chemicals are dissolved faster in hot water.
Hot water does not dissolve. Neither does "cold". And, the grammatically correct question would be "Hot does hot water dissolve faster than cooler water."