well you can get abaking tray and pour all of the salt soultion in it and put it in the oven and in a few mints you will see the water has dried out and left behind crystals of salt
It dissolves.
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.
Powdered juice dissolves faster in hot water, but tastes better in cold water.
Sand, or silicon oxide, is fairly inert. It does not dissolve in water. Sand is mostly the same material as glass. So it does not dissolve any faster than glass dissolves in cold water. Hydrofluoric acid is, however, another matter.
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.
dissolves
Sodium chloride (table salt) is just sodium ions and chlorine ions joined together in a lattice. When it dissolves, all the ions come apart and attach on the H and OH groups in the water, so in a sense it does disappear.
Salt disappears in water because it dissolves in water, but pepper doesn't disappear. You mix faster and so the salt disappears.
A mixture
because it evaporates
It dissolves.
A mixture
A solid that dissolves in a liquid is called a solute. The term solute means that which is dissolved. A solution is the resulting mixture of solute and solvent. A solvent is that which dissolves. Water is the most common solvent; if sugar dissolves in water, then sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. The term insoluble means does not dissolve, so for example, glass is insoluble in water. That's why you can pour water into a glass and the glass remains intact.
A homogeneous solution of sugar in water.
molecules are dense in water, heat can be gather faster for melting than while in the air.
Absolutely not! Using gasoline as a solvent, wax dissolves in it but glass will not dissolve at all. Using water as a solvent, salt dissolves in it but pepper will not dissolve at all. Using hydrofluoric acid as a solvent, glass dissolves in it but wax will not dissolve at all.
The solid separates down to the molecular level - and they mix with the water molecules. We cannot see molecules with the naked eye !