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Bonding, polarity of the particles, and intermolecular forces between particles determine if a solute will be soluble in a given solvent.
The rate of dissolving would be temperature dependent.
Will increase the rate of dissolution and hence how fast the solute is dissolved.
A simple common example of a dissolved substance would be placing sugar or salt in water. you can do this at home as an experiment. Take a clear glass container and place 1/2 cup of water in it with 1 teaspoon of sugar or salt and stir to increase how fast it is dissolved
As related to chemistry, 'dissolve' means to cause to pass into solution, e.g., dissolve salt in water. It also means to reduce solid matter to liquid form (melt).
solubility is a measurement that describes how much solute dissolves in a given amount of the solvent.
Bonding, polarity of the particles, and intermolecular forces between particles determine if a solute will be soluble in a given solvent.
I'm not quite sure what the question means. When something (a solute) is fully dissolved in a liquid (a solvent), the size of the particles are the size of the molecules of the solute. In other words, when something dissolved, what exists in solution is individual and separate molecules. A molecule is on the order of a few angstroms (tenths of a nanometer). That's small. Very small.If you are asking about the size of the particles before it has dissolved, then the size is completely irrelevant to how much will dissolve. The size will affect how FAST it dissolves, but not how MUCH dissolves. How much dissolves, or if it dissolves at all, is an inherent property of the solute and solvent you are using. You have no control over that if you need a specific solute/solvent combination (although higher temperature often increases the solubility of things -- but not always).
The rate of dissolving would be temperature dependent.
depends on how solid it is!
Increase the temperature of the solvent, increase the amount of the solvent, (if not already done) crush and break apart the solute, and stir well
Will increase the rate of dissolution and hence how fast the solute is dissolved.
A simple common example of a dissolved substance would be placing sugar or salt in water. you can do this at home as an experiment. Take a clear glass container and place 1/2 cup of water in it with 1 teaspoon of sugar or salt and stir to increase how fast it is dissolved
This depends on many factors (nature of the solid, granulation, stirring, pressure, temperature, volume of the solvent, quantity of the solute, effect of another ions etc.) and a general answer is not possible.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Solubility is the property of a solid, liquid, or gaseous chemical substance called solute to dissolve in a solid, liquid, or gaseous solvent. All substances have a different solubility and rate of solution is as stated in the paragraph above.
Factors influencing the solubility: 1. the nature of solute/solvent (chemical composition, polarity) 2. temperature 3. pressure 4. stirring 5. surface area of the solute 6. some added compounds 7. amount of the solute 8. the geometry of the beaker
When sugar is dissolved in any solvent (i.e. Water or Milk), its molecule tries to adjust themselves between the molecules of the solvent... When the solvent is heated the distance between the molecules is increased and the sugar molecules are easily dissolved as compared to when the solvent is cool or at normal temperature...
It depends on the dilute. Most diluted have increased solubility as temp goes up but gases under most circumstances and some other compounds (most of which are covalent) have reduced solubility with an inverse in temp