The term "saline" just means salty. A saline solution is water with salt in it. (This is not necessarily table salt, NaCl, but can be other salts as well.)
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Saline is a homogenous solution of salt in water.
Saline solution is a mixture of salt and water.
The water in a solution is called the solvent
The solvent is the water
Saline water is an example of a solution in science. The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent. ~Fact: Water is the universal solvent.
The solute (NaCl) is dissolved in the solvent (water)
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent. Salt water is the solution. This solution is sometimes called a saline solution.
salt water salt = solute water = solvent saltwater = solution
Saline, I believe.
saline solution is salted water with 0.85% of salt
The answer may vary from a different manufacturer. But the usual solvent is Sterile Water for Injection and the solute is Saline 0.9% (NaCl) or Dextrose 5%.
Saline is a homogenous solution of salt in water.
The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent. Water is the solvent because it is what dissolves the solid salt into the solution. The water molecules pull apart the crystal structure of salt and surround the salt ions.