Dissolved nitrogen in water is a solute; when nitrogen contain traces of another gas can be considered as a solvent.
There is neither a solvent nor solute in liquid nitrogen as it is not a solution. Liquid nitrogen is pure elementalnitrogen in liquid form.
The solvent is water, the solute is carbon dioxide (or nitrogen).
The solvent is water, the solute is carbon dioxide (or nitrogen).
Solvent. Solvents (usually liquids) dissolve solutes, resulting in a solution. Water is a protic solvent - any solvent that has a hydrogen atom bound to an oxygen or nitrogen group. Basically, it's any solvent that contains the labile H+.
Dissolved nitrogen in water is a solute; when nitrogen contain traces of another gas can be considered as a solvent.
There is neither a solvent nor solute in liquid nitrogen as it is not a solution. Liquid nitrogen is pure elementalnitrogen in liquid form.
The solvent is water, the solute is carbon dioxide (or nitrogen).
The solvent is water, the solute is carbon dioxide (or nitrogen).
No, since nitrogen makes up the majority of the atmosphere it is the solvent.
The question doesn't make any sense. All gases are miscible, so any other gas could act as either a solute or solvent of gaseous nitrogen.
Solvent. Solvents (usually liquids) dissolve solutes, resulting in a solution. Water is a protic solvent - any solvent that has a hydrogen atom bound to an oxygen or nitrogen group. Basically, it's any solvent that contains the labile H+.
The solute and solvent are not absolute. But solvent is a large concentration and the solute is the gaps in between. When solvent is nitrogen and solutes are carbon dioxide it leaves traces of other gasses.
The hydrogen atom bound to an oxygen or a naitrogen is called aprotic solvent.
The solvent: for air is nitrogen, which makes up about 78% of the atmosphere. The solutes: in air are Gases including oxygen, argon, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and a variety of other, trace gases.
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.
It's the oxygen. Since oxygen doesn't dissolve into nitrogen - air is a mixture, not a solution - you can't call it the solute and the nitrogen the solvent, which may have been the answer you thought you were going to get.