Yes. temperature is one variable that affects a substance's solubility.
Have the tea at a cooler temperature.
Henry's Law
It could be: It is a liquid at standard temperature and pressure and should certainly dissolve something.
Amount of sun, amount of clouds and amount of moisture in the air are 3 examples of things that could affect temperature.
The answer depends on the temperature of both water. But salt would dissolve faster in boiling water than it could in carbonated water at room temperature.
You can determine the amount or concentration of NaOH by titrating with a standard solution of acid.
Unsaturated solutions - more solute could be dissolved at the temperature. The solubility curve indicates the concentration of a saturated solution- the maximum amount of solute that will dissolve at that specific temperature. Values below the curve represent unsaturated solutions - more solute could be dissolved at that temperature. Values above the curve represent supersaturated solutions, a solution which holds more solute that can normally dissolve in that volume of solvent.
It has a large amount of intercellular material.
There are probably thousands of applications for this: 1. To determine the amount of heat an object needs to change its temperature. (ex. You are in the food industry and producing soup.. calorimetry will be VERY important here! You don't want to overheat or underheat it.) 2. You could use it to determine the calories content of food. Calorimetry is very important for nutrition!! 3. You could sue it to determine the amount of heat to heat certain metals. Metals often need to be heated so we can change their shapes. 4. I could go on and on and on and on.. Calorimetry, the ability to determine the amount of heat needed to cool / heat objects, is a very very practical tool in industry
Because solubility is a function directly proportional to the temperature, in Kelvins, of the thing you're trying to dissolve something into, to put it simply =] For this reason, you can actually dissolve a lot more of a solvent into a super hot solute than you could at room temperature--a process known as supersaturating.
you cant
Increasing the temperature the solubility increase.