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A solvent is a substance which dissolves, or the substance in which another substance is dissolved. The solute is the substance which is dissolved. A solvent dissolves the solute. In salt water the water is the solvent that dissolves the salt, or the solute.A solute is a homologous mixture, made of two or more substances.
A solution consists of one or more solutes dissolved in a solvent. The solute is the substance that dissolves and the solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute. Take salt water as an example. The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
Reducing particle size results in an increase in surface area. The increase in surface area allows more solvent (water) molecules to interact with the substance, and this increases the rate at which that substance dissolves.
Solution - a homogeneous, molecular mixture of two or more substances. Salt water is a solution of salt and water. Solvent - a substance that dissolves another to form a solution. In the above example, water is the solvent that salt is dissolved into to form salt water.
More solvent can dissolve more solute.
A solvent is a substance which dissolves, or the substance in which another substance is dissolved. The solute is the substance which is dissolved. A solvent dissolves the solute. In salt water the water is the solvent that dissolves the salt, or the solute.A solute is a homologous mixture, made of two or more substances.
Sugar dissolves faster than salt. When a substance dissolves into another substance, it turns into a solution. The substance that is dissolved is the solute.
you can make water dissolve more stuff by making it hotter. This is because the hotter the water is the bigger the gaps between the particules are making more space for the dissolving substance .
A solution consists of one or more solutes dissolved in a solvent. The solute is the substance that dissolves and the solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute. Take salt water as an example. The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
Reducing particle size results in an increase in surface area. The increase in surface area allows more solvent (water) molecules to interact with the substance, and this increases the rate at which that substance dissolves.
More than likely because boiling is much hotter than just warm and when things are hot then dissolve whats around them and since boiling is hotter than warm it dissolves faster. That's just my theory.
solute dissolves more rapidly in hot water
A hot substance will pass on heat to a substance at a cooler temperature. If it was surrounded by an even hotter substance it would be "given" heat. Heat can only flow from hotter to colder, just as water flows from higher to lower ground. If the temperature difference between the substances is great, then heat will pass more quickly, but if the difference is very slight, then the flow of heat will be very much slower.
A hot substance will pass on heat to a substance at a cooler temperature. If it was surrounded by an even hotter substance it would be "given" heat. Heat can only flow from hotter to colder, just as water flows from higher to lower ground. If the temperature difference between the substances is great, then heat will pass more quickly, but if the difference is very slight, then the flow of heat will be very much slower.
A solute is the substance that is dissolved in a solution. A solvent is the substance in which the solute dissolves. For example, salt water contains the solute salt and the solvent water, and the salt dissolves in the water.
This happens because the hotter a substance is, the faster its atoms or molecules are moving. They have more mobility and can get around faster.
Yes, since according to the wikipedia article for this substance more of it dissolves in water than this at a lower temperature.