No. Hydrogen is an element.
solute
The solvent is water and the solute is hydrogen chloride (HCl).
Solute = hydrogen peroxide, H2O2Solvent = water
Acid
acid
Hydrogen is the solute and palldium is the solvent
The material most commonly called "hydrogen peroxide", especially by non-chemists, is a solution of the solute hydrogen peroxide in water as the solvent.
solute
The solvent is water and the solute is hydrogen chloride (HCl).
Solute = hydrogen peroxide, H2O2Solvent = water
Carbon dioxide hydrogen and lead
A solute that dissociates to release hydrogen ions and causes a decrease in pH is an acid. To be more specific it is an Arrhenius acid and a Bronsted Lowry acid.
Acid
acid
It depends on the other substance that you are using. A solute is something that dissolves in something else. A solvent is something that other substances dissolve in For example: Salt dissolves in water Water is the solvent Salt is the solute
10-6 M. (M is Molarity or mols of solute per liter of solution.)
Solvent can be oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen and argon and co2 and other noble gases. Solute can be dust particles, pollen, sulfur dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide. Usually solvent is abundant than solute in any solution.