mix with 50% water
Dilute it with the same volume of distilled water (don't drink it)
Yes, it is possible.
1:2 of peroxide and water
more dilute not less dilute. "Less Dilute" means more concentrated.
No. Hydrogen peroxide is usually dissolved in water to make it more stable. The peroxide you buy at the pharmacy is 3% hydrogen peroxide and 97% water. Pure hydrogen peroxide, which is a dangerously strong oxidizer, can explosively decompose into water and oxygen.
Dilute it with the same volume of distilled water (don't drink it)
Yes, it is possible.
dilute twice in volume
1:2 of peroxide and water
20 volume is 6% solution. To make it 3% solution just add same volume of water to the original 6% solution and you have double volume of 3% solution.
Dilute it with water until the volume is 5 times the original volume
Any solution, acidic or basic, can be made more dilute by adding water, thereby increasing its volume without the addition of any solute.
Dilute is where you weaken something .e.g. the chemical will be less strong. Think of it as when you make squash you have to add water to dilute it so the taste isn't as strong. Dissolve is where a chemical completely disappears from the eye. Like when you add sugar to tea you can't see it but actually it has dissolved into the tea to make it sweeter.
more dilute not less dilute. "Less Dilute" means more concentrated.
No. Hydrogen peroxide is usually dissolved in water to make it more stable. The peroxide you buy at the pharmacy is 3% hydrogen peroxide and 97% water. Pure hydrogen peroxide, which is a dangerously strong oxidizer, can explosively decompose into water and oxygen.
When a body of water loses volume, the pollution inside the water remains relatively constant and as a result the water that would normally dilute the pollutants becomes magnified as a result.
You need to add an amount of solvent, such as water, to dilute it but you didn't specify the volume of the starting solution.