Solution: Washing up Water
Solvent: Water
Solute: Detergent
Solution: Soda water
Solvent: Water
Solute: Carbon Dioxide Gas
Solution: Two-stroke motor mower fuel
Solvent: Petrol
Solute: Oil
sugar and water
salt and water
ice and water
any gas which dissolve in water
cooking items
Let's consider dilute nitric acid solution as an example. Here, the solvent is water whereas the solute is nitric acid.
homogeneous mixture of two or more components is called as solution.Components of solution are solvent and solute.In which solvent is present in large amount and solute is in small amount.generally solute is considered as impurities for solvent.eg.sugary solution-sugar is solute and water is solvent.
Temperature, pressure, the amount of the solute surface area exposed to the solvent and the saturation point of the solvent are some of the factors.
the solvent is water and the solute is coco beans i think
It depends on what you are trying to do. The solvent (can be liguid, solid or gas) is whatever dissolves another substance, the solute. If I have a heated vat of lard (melted) and want to dissolve it in some salt, then salt is the solute and the fat is the solvent. If I then pour in some vegetable fat that would be a second solute. So I would have a mixture of lard (animal fat- solvent), salt (a solute) and vegetable fat (a solute). It all depends on how the fat is being used at the time. If you are dissolving something into it; it is a solvent. If it is being dissolved into something; it is a solute.
You add more solvent.
homogeneous mixture of two or more components is called as solution.Components of solution are solvent and solute.In which solvent is present in large amount and solute is in small amount.generally solute is considered as impurities for solvent.eg.sugary solution-sugar is solute and water is solvent.
I shall explain it to you with the aid of an example. If we take some sugar and add it to water, then the solute is sugar and the solvent is water.The solute is always the substance that is dissolved, and the solvent is the liquid in which the solute dissolves.
solvent;water solute:pineapple and some dissolved substance
The solution is what is formed when a solute is dissolved into a solvent. In this case, the solute would be sugar, and the solvent is the tea. So to answer you question, neither. Solute-substance that dissolves into a solvent Solvent-substances that dissolves a solute. **HOPE THIS HELPS :)**
Temperature, pressure, the amount of the solute surface area exposed to the solvent and the saturation point of the solvent are some of the factors.
I shall explain it to you with the aid of an example. If we take some sugar and add it to water, then the solute is sugar and the solvent is water.The solute is always the substance that is dissolved, and the solvent is the liquid in which the solute dissolves.
You can eitheradd more solvent,allow some solvent to evaporate,add more solute,allow the solute to precipitate and remove some.
A solute is something you are dissolving. The solution is the combination of the solvent and solute. Take a glass of water. You put some sugar (solute) into it. Since sugar dissolves in water it is the solute, and the solvent is the water. The solution is the water with the dissolved sugar in it. Graffiti remover dissolves and removes graffiti. Therefore the graffiti is the solute and the remover is the solvent.
sometimes. All solutions have at least one solute and one solvent. While water often does act as a solvent, some solutions have other solvents. Solutions where the solute is dissolved in water belong to a special group of solutions called aqueous solutions.
Solvents can be used in chromotography (used to separate the colours in a ink of some type): waters ethanol others........
the solvent is water and the solute is coco beans i think
The solute is the thing that dissolves, in this case the sodium hydroxide. The solvent is the thing that dissolves it, in this case the water. The result is neither solvent nor solute, but a solution. It could be used as a solvent for some other material.