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No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
Salt is the solute (the substance being dissolved) and water is the solvent (the substance doing the dissolving.
separate into ions.
They don't dissolve well in water. (It says so my textbook but it doesn't seem right)
The solute. Solutions are formed when one substance (the solute) is dissolved into another (the solvent). For example, when a spoonful of sugar is dissolved in water, the sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent.
If a substance can be dissolved in water, that substance said to be water soluble.
The molecules of a dissolved substance are surrounded by water molecules and are not visible as separate substances.
The water is heated and vaporizes, but the substance dissolved in it can't evaporate and is left behind.
No. The SUBSTANCE is still water, only now sugar is dissolved in it.
The cells that are brought by droplets of water and a dissolved substance is called diffusion.
If a substance produces hydroxyl ions (OH-) when dissolved in water, it is referred to as a BASE.
Salt is the solute (the substance being dissolved) and water is the solvent (the substance doing the dissolving.
Energy is absorbed.
This substance is a base.
It is called a solute, which is dissolved in a solvent
separate into ions.
It is a mixture, since solutions are clear. In solutions, the solute is the substance that is dissolved and mud in water does not dissolve. Muddy water is not a solution, it is a mixture because u can separate mud from water.