3 - ice, liquid, vapor
2
Only one phase, a homogeneous solution.
40.8 grams
Sugar is a salt (bear with me here) which contains as many positive ions as negative ones so would be effectively neutral in solution
No. A saturated solution is still in equilibrium. If you bring it into contact with more of the solute, the concentration will remain the same. Solute will precipitate out at the same rate that more solute dissolves into the solution. An unstable equilibrium would be a supersaturated solution. In a supersaturated solution, more of the solute is in solution that would be equilibrium with the solid solute (or gas if you are dissolving gas for example). An example that many people are familiar with is dissolving a lot of sugar into hot water. As it cools down, the solution becomes supersaturated. As long as there is nothing for the sugar to nucleate on , the sugar can remain in solution indefinitely. If you hang a string in the solution, the sugar will start crystalizing on the string, forming "rock candy."
To make a 10% sugar solution you need to dissolve 10 grams of sugar and bring the volume up to 100 ml
9 moles contain 54,199267713.10e23 molecules.
5 cubes of sugar and one teaspoon full is needed in the preparation of salt sauger solution (SSS)
Phases* 8 Phases
5 phases are in a plot
8 phases