Sugar is an organic compound, it contains covalent bonds. Things such as salt (NaCl) form ionic bonds, so they can dissociate in water as ions (Na+ Cl-). The solubility of organic compounds have to do with their polarity. Sugar is polar so it will dissolve in a polar solvent such as water. (like dissolves like)
insoluble example: sugar dissolves into water
homogeneous because the water dissolves the sugar
When sugar is placed in water, it dissolves to form a sugar solution. The sugar molecules break apart and mix with the water molecules, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
No
Sugar - it dissolves readily in water. Salt - it also easily dissolves in water. Baking soda - it is soluble in water. Vinegar - it dissolves in water to form a solution.
sugar dissolves in water through dispersion.
Salt dissolves faster in heated water. Sugar dissolves faster in regular water.
Sugar dissolves faster than salt. When a substance dissolves into another substance, it turns into a solution. The substance that is dissolved is the solute.
You can use the particle theory to help explain what happens when solutes dissolve. The particle theory states that there are spaces between all particles. This means that, in a sample of water, there are many water particles, but also many empty spaces. When you look at sugar. The sugar dissolves, the sugar particles separate and mix with the water particles.
The sugar will dissolve in water because sugar is polar and so is water with hydrogen bonds. When attraction happens, the water molecules will separate the sugar molecules and the sugar will be dissolved.
insoluble example: sugar dissolves into water
Yes. Sugar is soluble in water.
yes
The sugar dissolves.
No. When the grains of sugar dissolves in the water, the sugar is still there. If one should taste the water, they would discover that the water is sweet. Therefore, that proves the sugar remains within the water.
The sugar dissolves in the water and you taste the sugar
Candy corn is mostly sugar and Sprite is mostly water, sugar dissolves in water.