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Solubility is a measure of how well a solute can dissolve in a solvent at a given temperature.
Stirring and heating improve the rate of dissolution and not affect the measured solubility at a given temperature.But I mention that the solubilty of solids is increased when the temperature increase.
Not the solubility, but the dissolving speed.
the temp of water (what they changed)
Reducing Aire Pressure
Solubility
This the solubility in water.
the temperature of the water (table G in the chemistry reference table)
Each salt has a specific solubility at a given temperature. See a short table at the link below.
Solubility is a measure of how well a solute can dissolve in a solvent at a given temperature.
NaCl dissolve so easily that it is not even given a solubility product constant, as this value ( also known as the Ksp) tells us the solubility for compounds that don't readily dissolve.
There are different types of solubility. The most common ones are lipophilic solubility and aqueous solubility. There are different factors that will affect solubility and define its specification.
Stirring and heating improve the rate of dissolution and not affect the measured solubility at a given temperature.But I mention that the solubilty of solids is increased when the temperature increase.
Solubility of the material in the given solvent. EG, salt in water at 25 deg. C would be such an experiment.
Sodium chloride is more soluble in water than KCl.
You might try dissolving the same weight of rock salt and table salt in the same amount of distilled water and seeing how the solutions match up for clarity.
Not the solubility, but the dissolving speed.