Solutions get diluted whenever there is an increase on volume but the number of moles of your substance remains the same. Eg: if I have 1 mole of NaCl in 1000ml, then I add 1000ml of water, then net volume is 2000ml but the number of moles of NaCl present is still 1 so the conc went from 1 mol/L to 0.5 mol/L. It was diluted!
Compare and contrast the properties of dilute and concentrated solutions is because you can dilute you solvent into a solution and then you have a concentrated solution.
It depends upon amount of solute if it in low concentration then solutions are Dilute solutions if it is very lw then solutions are very Dilute solutions.
Concentrated solutions have a high amount of solute particles dissolved in the solvent, whereas dilute solutions have a low amount of solute particles. Concentrated solutions are stronger and have a higher concentration, while dilute solutions are weaker and have a lower concentration.
Not all dilute basic solutions are weak bases. Dilute solutions can still contain strong bases like sodium hydroxide, which dissociates completely in water to form hydroxide ions. This makes it a strong base, even in dilute solutions.
Parts per million (ppm) is commonly used for very dilute solutions. It represents the number of parts of solute per one million parts of solution. Another unit that can be used is parts per billion (ppb) for even more dilute solutions.
Dilute solutions with low concentrations of solutes. They have a smaller amount of solute dissolved in the solvent compared to concentrated solutions. Dilute solutions are commonly found in everyday scenarios like weak tea or watered-down juice.
Dilute water solutions are neutral.
The opposite ends of the concentration spectrum are dilute and concentrated solutions. Dilute solutions have a low solute-to-solvent ratio, while concentrated solutions have a high solute-to-solvent ratio.
No, the dilute solutions of highly water soluble compounds are unsaturatd as solution of NaCl but dilute solution of AgCl or BaSO4 are saturated because they are very little soluble in water.
by adding more solvent to them
No, in the same way a dilute acid can be classed as a strong acid. Even very dilute sodium hydroxide is still classed as a strong base.
lack of oxygen