Solubility! There's a free homework answer, is my guess.
Well the answer for this question was that when you take water and the other ingredient to mix them together was to be a coffee, that was solvent and solute. while solution was the coffee. the suspension was nothing.
A solution is a mixture in which a substance dissolves into another substance at the molecular level. The substance that dissolves is called the solute, while the substance it dissolves into is called the solvent. The result is a homogenous mixture with uniform composition throughout.
well, solubility is a measurement that describes how much solute dissolves in a given amount of solvent.
Well, I believe that in referring to placing sugar in iced tea, tea is the solvent, and sugar the solute. Technically, however, the question is flawed, as tea can be a solute as well, with water as the solvent and the organic compounds released from steeping the tea leaves the solute.
You can not ask the question "is pepsi a solute or solvent?" you need to ask "what is the solvent or solute of pepsi?" Pepsi is not a solute or solvent, because it has solute and solvent in it. :)
Neither. "Solute" and "solvent" are used to refer to the components of a mixture or a solution. In such a case, a solute dissolves into another substance, called the solvent. A bottle filled with oil and water will not be a solution because the oil and water will not mix.
Baking soda may be the solute in water as a solvent.
Well, honey, you add solute to solvent because that's just how chemistry works. The solute dissolves in the solvent, not the other way around. It's like trying to fit a square peg into a round hole - it just ain't gonna work. So save yourself some time and do it the right way, okay?
On the molecular level, that poor solute is being torn apart. Take NaCl for example. When it dissolves in water, the chlorine and sodium atoms are ripped away from each other. The positive ends of the water molecules (the ends with hydrogen atoms) are attracted to the chlorine atoms and surround it, while the oxygen ends (negatively charged) are attracted to the sodium atoms and then the water molecules will surround it as well. It isn't always perfectly clear; salt water tends to have a white tinge to it, even after all the salt has been dissolved.
Hey whoever asked this question! Well, sugar is actually a solute and water is a solvent! Hopes that this answers your question. BTW: Nice question!~From, unknown!
Both a solute and a solvent are components of a solution. The solute is the substance that is dissolved in the solvent, and the solvent is the substance in which the solute is dissolved. Together, they create a homogenous mixture where the solute particles are dispersed in the solvent.
Depends on what you are asking- Science-The degree to which a substance dissolves in a solvent to make a solution. Math-the maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved into a solvent Although most definitions suggest it means to dissolve a solvent into a solution. Not sure completely.