Yes the best example is nothing but salt dissolved in Water. It is a fast process when compared to crystalline substances dissolved in water. The rate of dissolving increases with increase in temperature.
Example:
Values are appropriate.
Take one glass of water (at 28 deg C) and say max 100g of salt dissolved in it. When you take one glass of water ( at 60 deg C) the amount of salt dissolved is more.
No, many substances do not dissolve in water.
yes
amorphous
A substance that dissolves readily in water is called "water soluble"
It dissolves all polar and ionic substances .
like dissolves like..water is polar so polar or ionic substances will dissolve in water
Digestive system
No, many substances do not dissolve in water.
yes
amorphous
Water is only a quasi-universal solvent. The chemical and physical properties of water are very suitable for a good solvent. Water is not totally universal. Many glues don't disolve in water, but they do in petrol (gasoline).this is because water dissolves a lot of substances except oil,etc... likes dissolves likes, polar substances dissolves polar substances and most of the things here in the world are made up of polar substances.
Water does not dissolve everything. Some substances dont mix with water. Those are hydrophobic substances, ex: oil molecules
water
Calcium hydroxide and hydrogen.
A substance that dissolves readily in water is called "water soluble"
water is an effective solvent because it is a polar molecule, it dissolves other polar substances, and it dissolves ionic compounds. that is why it is called the "universal solvent" due to the geometry of the water molecule itself
Salt and sugar are examples of substances that readily dissolve in water.