It is attracted to the cation.
Water (H2O) is two atoms of hydrogen and one of oxygen.
Liquid is a state of matter (liquid, solid, gas, plasma).A solution is a homogeneous mixture of particles in a liquid form (HCl, NaCl dissolved in water until the water is saturated or supersaturated, ect).A water molecule contains one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms that are connected by covalent bonds.
The negative dipole of the oxygen
It tells you that in a molecule of CO2, there is one carbon atom, and two oxygen atoms.
covalent bond
Water (H2O) is two atoms of hydrogen and one of oxygen.
Since water is a slightly polar molecule (the hydrogen end being slightly positive and the oxygen ends being slightly negative) the positively charged sodium ion (Na+) will be attracted to the oxygen end of the water molecule.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
They are not attracted to each other because one is polar and one is nonpolar.
The oxygen end,which is a negative pole
No, a base can have many different elements forming it. Water already has two elements, oxygen and hydrogen, so anything aqueous solution adds to that number.
Liquid is a state of matter (liquid, solid, gas, plasma).A solution is a homogeneous mixture of particles in a liquid form (HCl, NaCl dissolved in water until the water is saturated or supersaturated, ect).A water molecule contains one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms that are connected by covalent bonds.
The negative dipole of the oxygen
Surrounds the ions with the hydrogen, positive end, attracted to the negative ion ( Cl -, for instance ) and the oxygen, negative end, attracted to the positive ion ( Na +, for instance ).
It tells you that in a molecule of CO2, there is one carbon atom, and two oxygen atoms.
Yes. You can add more solute to make it more concentrated, or if some of the solvent (water) evaporates it can become more concentrated. If you add additional water, it will become less concentrated.