Solubility refers to the ability of a substance to dissolve in another substance. The substance that dissolves is called the solute, and the substance that does the dissolving is the solvent. Water is known as the universal solvent because it can dissolve so many different substances. Water is the solvent in living systems.
Generally the solubility of solids in solvents increase with the temperature and the solubility of gases in solvents decrease with the temperature.
solubility of KCl at 100 degrees
The amount of solute that can dissolve in 100g of solvent will vary as the solubility of different substances vary, but solubility also depends upon other factors such as temperature. For example the solubility for glucose at room temperature is 91g/(100ml).
The solubility of potassium nitrate increase with the temperature.
The solubility would decrease because it is a gas.
Solubility refers to the ability of a solute to dissolve in a solvent. The concentration of a solution refers to the amount of solute that is dissolved.
Solubility refers to the ability of a solute to dissolve in a solvent. The concentration of a solution refers to the amount of solute that is dissolved.
Solubility is the ability of a solute to dissolve in a solvent in order to form a homogeneous solution. Relative solubility refers to the solubility of different substances.
Reference 11: Apparent solubility refers to the concentration of material at apparent equilibrium (supersaturation). Apparent solubility is distinct from true thermodynamic solubility, which is reached at injinite equilibrium time.
The question refers as to what measures the amount of one material that will dissolve in another material. The answer is solubility.
The correct spelling is "solubility," which refers to the ability of a substance to dissolve in a solvent like water.
There is no such thing as "surface area" of "solubility" since the latter refers to the maximum concentration in the solution of a solid (or liquid) in a liquid. "Surface area", as applied to such a phenomenon is meaningless. However, by *increasing* the surface area of, say, a salt, by grinding it, will increase its solubility. Maybe *that* is what the questioner meant.
FeOH2 is insoluble. Solubility refers to how much a substance will dissolve in a solvent. FeOH2 is ferrous hydroxide or iron hydroxide.
Apparent solubility represents the solubility one observed during the experiment while the intrinsic solubility meant to the real or true solubility.
The prefix "solu-" comes from the Latin word "solvō," meaning "loosen" or "dissolve," and the suffix "-bility" comes from the Latin word "-bilitās," meaning "capability" or "capacity." Together, they create "solubility," which refers to the ability of a substance to dissolve in a solvent.
if an object is aqueous it can dissolve
The ability of one substance to dissolve in another substance is called SOLUBILITY.