Solvents dissolve solutes. In an aqueous salt water solution, the water is the solvent that dissolves the solute salt. Water is also known as the universal solvent.
sodium chloride solution, sugar solution, air, brandy, wines, etc.Mixes of gas would be homogenous, but I'm not sure whether you may call them a solution.Generally, you have a solution when something is actively dissolving something else. This requires interaction between the substance and whatever you solve it in. If you have a homogenous phase, i think you may take the molecular interactions for granted, else you would not have a homogenous mixture.
It means the solution dissolves into something else partially
Not with water! Maybe with something else in the water? It only ionises when dissolved in the water to: K+ and Br- , but does not react with it. Dissolving is purely physical!
Anything completely dissolved in anything else always forms a homogeneous mixture also known as a solution. The object that is dissolving is the solute, and the material that dissolves the solute is the solvent.In this case, the sugar is the solute, and the water is the solvent.
well you know its not a chemical change when you see the salt dissolving because if your were to put something else like sugar then it would be a chemical change because the sugar would just float right to the bottom and stay there but salt would go around in the water and start dissolving.
sodium chloride solution, sugar solution, air, brandy, wines, etc.Mixes of gas would be homogenous, but I'm not sure whether you may call them a solution.Generally, you have a solution when something is actively dissolving something else. This requires interaction between the substance and whatever you solve it in. If you have a homogenous phase, i think you may take the molecular interactions for granted, else you would not have a homogenous mixture.
sodium chloride solution, sugar solution, air, brandy, wines, etc.Mixes of gas would be homogenous, but I'm not sure whether you may call them a solution.Generally, you have a solution when something is actively dissolving something else. This requires interaction between the substance and whatever you solve it in. If you have a homogenous phase, i think you may take the molecular interactions for granted, else you would not have a homogenous mixture. Just to get to the cut ,no.
sodium chloride solution, sugar solution, air, brandy, wines, etc.Mixes of gas would be homogenous, but I'm not sure whether you may call them a solution.Generally, you have a solution when something is actively dissolving something else. This requires interaction between the substance and whatever you solve it in. If you have a homogenous phase, i think you may take the molecular interactions for granted, else you would not have a homogenous mixture.
Its not a chemical change when you see the salt dissolving because if your were to put something else like sugar then it would be a chemical.
No, it is a physical change. A chemical reaction involves changing a molecule(s) into something else. When dissolving sugar in water, you still have sugar and you still have water.
Easy the solute would go first since its at the top in a solution need something else such as evaporation. Easy the solute would go first since its at the top in a solution need something else such as evaporation.
It means the solution dissolves into something else partially
Not with water! Maybe with something else in the water? It only ionises when dissolved in the water to: K+ and Br- , but does not react with it. Dissolving is purely physical!
It depends what you mean by water solution. If it's a solution of something else in water, it depends on the solute. If you mean just water, it's pH 7.
The mass of the solution will be equal to the mass of the solute plus the mass of the solvent. However, the total mass does not change.
They are all something in something else. Suspensions are colloids. Colloids are something small dispersed in something else - solids in liquids (a suspension), gases in liquids, gases in solids etc etc Solutions are one phase - a liquid, but at least 2 compounds make up that phase.
Anything completely dissolved in anything else always forms a homogeneous mixture also known as a solution. The object that is dissolving is the solute, and the material that dissolves the solute is the solvent.In this case, the sugar is the solute, and the water is the solvent.