Sucrose is more soluble in hot water due to the increase in molecular motion of the solute and solvent.
Sucrose is more soluble in hot water.
NaCl is soluble in cold water but more readily soluble in hot water
hot water
You've got it in reverse. When sucrose dissolves in water, sucrose is the solute, and water is the solvent. In order to dissolve, sucrose molecules have to be more attracted to water molecules than they are to other sucrose molecules. If the attraction of sucrose to sucrose was greater than the attraction of sucrose to water, then there would be no reason for the solid sucrose to turn into the aqueous sucrose solution. Sucrose molecules would simply remain firmly attached to each other if that were the case.
You've got it in reverse. When sucrose dissolves in water, sucrose is the solute, and water is the solvent. In order to dissolve, sucrose molecules have to be more attracted to water molecules than they are to other sucrose molecules. If the attraction of sucrose to sucrose was greater than the attraction of sucrose to water, then there would be no reason for the solid sucrose to turn into the aqueous sucrose solution. Sucrose molecules would simply remain firmly attached to each other if that were the case.
It is more soluble in warm water.
Sucrose is more soluble in hot water due to the increase in molecular motion of the solute and solvent.
Potassium chloride is more soluble in water. However, in general, both compounds are highly soluble in water.
Gases are more soluble in cold water.
cold water
NaCl is soluble in cold water but more readily soluble in hot water
Hot water, because particles will move faster and spread apart more than in cold water, thus making it more soluble.
Ozone is more soluble in hot water than cold water. This is due to the rate at which the atoms and molecules are moving around.
Hot.
hot water
Like most (but not all !) salts they are more soluble in hot than in cold water.
yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Sodium sulfate is somewhat soluble in cold water, but much more soluble in hot water. In fact, its solubility increases more than 10 times between 0oC and 32.4oC!