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67.0 grams of caffeine will dissolve in 100 mL of water at 100 degrees Celsius. 100mL of water = 100g of water so.. 67.0 grams of water will dissolve in 100 grams of water at 100 degrees Celsius. I pretty sure this is right, I was searching for the answer myself and it seems to work. But more accurately you will need to find the density of water at 100 ºC which is 0.9584 g/mL. So, 100g/0.9584 g/mL equals about 104 mL. Then 104 mL x 67.0g/100 mL = 69.9 g.
No, but interestingly spearmint does at a temperature of 73.48 degrees celsius, 164.264 degrees fahrenheit.
yes
no
Phthalic acid will dissolve 18g of per 100mL of boiling water. (25g/18g) x 100mL = 138.89mL of boiling water is needed to dissolve 25g of phthalic acid.
Aproximately 4 grams of potassium chlorate will dissolve in 50 g of water at 20 degrees celsius.
204g of sugar is the maximum amount of sugar that will dissolve into 100mL of water.
67.0 grams of caffeine will dissolve in 100 mL of water at 100 degrees Celsius. 100mL of water = 100g of water so.. 67.0 grams of water will dissolve in 100 grams of water at 100 degrees Celsius. I pretty sure this is right, I was searching for the answer myself and it seems to work. But more accurately you will need to find the density of water at 100 ºC which is 0.9584 g/mL. So, 100g/0.9584 g/mL equals about 104 mL. Then 104 mL x 67.0g/100 mL = 69.9 g.
No, but interestingly spearmint does at a temperature of 73.48 degrees celsius, 164.264 degrees fahrenheit.
No, sugar has a melting point of 161 degrees Celsius and salt has a melting point of 801 degrees Celsius
222g/100g H2O at 20 degrees Celsius
yes
no
Phthalic acid will dissolve 18g of per 100mL of boiling water. (25g/18g) x 100mL = 138.89mL of boiling water is needed to dissolve 25g of phthalic acid.
Well, heating a cup of water would allow it to dissolve more of a particular substance if that is what you mean (given that the solute is able to dissolve in a polar solvent at all). For example, if you have two cups of equal volumes of water, one at 20 degrees celsius and the other at 35 degrees celsius, the water at the higher temperature (35 degrees celsius) would be able to dissolve more salt that the water at the lower temperature.
Yes. It has a solubility of about 91g/100mL of water at 20C.
condensation