Want this question answered?
To make a solution you add a solute to a solvent.
You add more solvent.
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
You'll need to remove solvent somehow; most likely by evaporation if the solvent has a higher vapor pressure than the solute.
... The solute is sugar or the tea mix, the solvent is the water.
To make a solution you add a solute to a solvent.
Solution
If you weigh the solute, and then weigh the solvent, and then add the solute to the solvent and weigh the solution, you will find that the sum of the weights of the solute and solvent is equal to the weight of the resulting solution. So mass is conserved.
I shall explain it to you with the aid of an example. If we take some sugar and add it to water, then the solute is sugar and the solvent is water.The solute is always the substance that is dissolved, and the solvent is the liquid in which the solute dissolves.
Because when a solute and a solvent are combined, it creates a solution. When two solvents are combined, it just makes a stronger solvent.Further answerIt also depends on what you are trying to do. Alcohol is a solvent and so is water but if you wanted to have diluite alcohol you'd have to add water to alcohol, or vice versa.
solvent;water solute:pineapple and some dissolved substance
you should add more of the solute to the solution to make it more concentrated and more of the solvent to the solution to make it diluted.
I shall explain it to you with the aid of an example. If we take some sugar and add it to water, then the solute is sugar and the solvent is water.The solute is always the substance that is dissolved, and the solvent is the liquid in which the solute dissolves.
You add more solvent.
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)