sugar, table salt, sodium sulphate, fructose, potassium chloride, potassium iodide, sodium iodide, uranyl nitrate, etc.
the answer to this one is, you cant dissolve a solid..like wood well you could with some chemicals that would eat away at the solid but if you mean putting it in some water and heat it up then no you can not.
Not all the solids will dissolve in water. Different solids have different solubilities (some will dissolve more than others). The higher temperature, the more will dissolve
it's all about the structure of the particles and the bonds if the chemical bond are mostly ionic they will dissolve to form freely moving ions and some structures of atoms are much stronger like metallic bonds. covalent bonds do not dissolve easily but some covalent bonds break and dissolve in water. It's all about the bond and structures of different elements.
Insoluble particles. Some solids are soluble in water and able to be dissolved Some solids are insoluble If a solid is a mixture of both, then some (the soluble part) will dissolve in water; some (the insoluble part) will not and depending on size of the particle will be left in suspension (very small or low density) or sitting at the bottom of the container (large or high density)
No, they do not all dissolve. Some compunds will dissolve, but many will not. Most pure metals, for example, will not dissolve in water, while their oxides may or may not.
the answer to this one is, you cant dissolve a solid..like wood well you could with some chemicals that would eat away at the solid but if you mean putting it in some water and heat it up then no you can not.
A solvent is that which may dissolve a solid. Water, hydrochloric Acid, and alcohol are some (times) solvents.
Not all the solids will dissolve in water. Different solids have different solubilities (some will dissolve more than others). The higher temperature, the more will dissolve
Water would be the solvent and the solid would be the solute.
retains fixed shape not easily compresable does not flow easily
-.- They are solubles?
Water is called "the universal solvent" because many, many substances can dissolve in it. However, there are some that can dissolve easier than others: salt and sugar are some of the quickest. Liquids and liquid chemicals also "dissolve" very easily in water, i.e. the combine with water molecules to create a solution. Hope this helped!!
No, not at all. In fact most solids are INsoluble. Some solids (such as metals, stones, wood) don't dissolve while other solids like sugar or salt do dissolve. Water is a polar molecule, therefore it can dissolve only polar substances and many ionic compounds. However, it cannot dissolve non-polar substances.
Some solid like soap can be used as a lubricant because it easily lathers with water.
Many different substances dissolve easily in water, but there are some which don't, particularly oily substances. Soap makes these substances dissolve in water.
it's all about the structure of the particles and the bonds if the chemical bond are mostly ionic they will dissolve to form freely moving ions and some structures of atoms are much stronger like metallic bonds. covalent bonds do not dissolve easily but some covalent bonds break and dissolve in water. It's all about the bond and structures of different elements.
Some do, some do not. It depends on a property called brittleness.