No it's doesn't like that. It is a gas in normal conditions.
Ammonia is soluble in water because it can form hydrogen bonds with water molecules. This allows ammonia to dissociate into ammonium ions (NH4+) and hydroxide ions (OH-) in water, increasing its solubility. Additionally, ammonia and water molecules have similar structures, which further enhances their ability to mix and dissolve in each other.
Ammonia can be removed from water through processes like aeration, chlorination, or ion exchange. Aeration involves exposing water to air to allow the ammonia to volatilize and escape. Chlorination can help to convert ammonia into chloramines, which can then be removed through filtration. Ion exchange involves passing water through a resin that exchanges ammonia ions for other ions like sodium or hydrogen.
Fill the bottle or bucket with tap water. Always add ammonia to water, not water to ammonia. Add about 3 ounces of ammonia per pint to quart of water. However, you can make it stronger or weaker if you like. Never combine ammonia with anything that has bleach. That makes a poison gas. Gokhan SERBETCI OKNAL INDUSTRIAL MEDICAL AND CHEMICAL GASES A.S
Ammonia would be the solute and water would be the solvent.
It has not a color. It just like water.
Household ammonia is primarily composed of water and ammonia gas (NH₃). It typically contains around 5-10% ammonia gas dissolved in water, along with other minor compounds like surfactants and stabilizers.
NH3, or ammonia, is colorless, like water.
Water is the solvent. Ammonia is the solute.
Ammonia is a compound, not a mixture. Household ammonia is a homogeneous mixture of ammonia and water.
Not very efficiently, because ammonia dissolves so easily in water due to compatible intermolecular attractions between ammonia and water.
Ammonia is the solute and the solvent is the water.
The solute is the ammonia and the solvent is water.Rollin V. Bacton pogi! ;-)