At the molecular level, temperature is inversely proportional to solubility. As the temperature of a liquid increases, the solubility of gases in that liquid decreases.
Each solute has a limit of solubility in a liquid, at a given temperature and pressure. The undissolved solute is a solid residue.
The solubility is determined experimentally dissolving the solute in a solvent at a given temperature and pressure.
Increasing the temperature the solubility increase.
(1) Temperature (2) Nature of solute or solvent (3) Pressure
The most important effect is temperature. As temperature increases, the solubility of most solid solutes increases. At different temperature, the Ksp value for salts fluctuates. With the Ksp value of the solute, you can determine the concentrations of the ions formed. Surface area also plays an important part. The more surface area, the faster a solute will dissolve
The term 'solubility of a solution' is meaningless. Perhaps you mean how do you increase the solubility of a solute in a solvent? In that case, if your solute is a solid, increase the temperature, and if it is a gas, decrease the temperature.
Each solute has a limit of solubility in a liquid, at a given temperature and pressure. The undissolved solute is a solid residue.
effect of temperature on solubility - solid in liquid-most solid become more soluble in a liquid as the temperature rises. effect of pressure on solubility -pressure changes have little effect on solubility if the solute is a liquid or a solid.
solubility increase as the temperature rises rises thus its directly proportional under normal circumstances
When you increase the temperature the solubility of a solute in a solution increases. This is due to the fact that heat is required to break the bonds that are holding the molecules in the solid together. Note that the opposite is true for gases, though.
The solubility is determined experimentally dissolving the solute in a solvent at a given temperature and pressure.
Increasing the temperature the solubility increase.
(1) Temperature (2) Nature of solute or solvent (3) Pressure
When the temperature increase, the kinetic energy of the solid,liquid and gas particles increase. Therefor collisions between solute and solvent particles increase. So solubility of solids increase with temperature. But solubility of gasses decrease.
The most important effect is temperature. As temperature increases, the solubility of most solid solutes increases. At different temperature, the Ksp value for salts fluctuates. With the Ksp value of the solute, you can determine the concentrations of the ions formed. Surface area also plays an important part. The more surface area, the faster a solute will dissolve
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Some methods are:- increasing the temperature- stirring- if the solute is a solid, reducing the grain sizes- increasing the pressure