The water in a solution is called the solvent
The solvent is the water
Sugar water is a solution in which sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. The water dissolves the sugar.
When water is the solvent, the mixture is a solution.
A solvent is a substance that dissolves the solute in a solution. For example, in salt water, water is the solvent and the salt is the solute. Water dissolves the salt.
Calcite does not have a pH. The pH scale determines how acidic or basic an aqueous solution is meaning solution in which the solvent is water.
The water in a solution is called the solvent
Pure baking soda does not have a pH. pH is the negative logarithm of the concentration of hydrogen ions in an aqueous solution (a solution where water is the solvent). But if you have baking soda, or any alkaline substance, in a higher concentration (i.e. more dissolved in the same amount of water) the pH will be higher, if it is in a lower concentration, the pH will be lower.
Concentrated. You dilute it with a pH 7 solvent (water). There are more H+ ions available in concentrated
The solvent is the water
Sugar water is a solution in which sugar is the solute and water is the solvent. The water dissolves the sugar.
solution ------- Sugar dissolved in water: sugar is the solute, water is the solvent; and the solute plus the solvent - is a solution !
When water is the solvent, the mixture is a solution.
The water in a solution is called the solvent
The solvent is water, the solute is salt; solvent and solute form a solution.
In a salt water solution, the salt is dissolved in the water, therefore salt is the solute and water is the solvent.
A solvent is a substance that dissolves the solute in a solution. For example, in salt water, water is the solvent and the salt is the solute. Water dissolves the salt.