The factors effecting the creation of a solution are: temperature, pressure. and the amounts and relative natures of the solute and solvent.
The amount of solute that can be dissolved in a solvent has many factors. These include: the strength of the solvent, the temperature of the solvent, whether the solute is soluble or not. There is no definite answer to the question.
This depend on the solute and the specific solvent.
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).
Factors affecting the solubility:1. the nature of solute/solvent (chemical composition, polarity)2. temperature3. pressure4. stirring5. surface area of the solute6. some added compounds7. amount of the solute 8. the geometry of the beaker
Factors affecting solubilityș1. the nature of solute/solvent (chemical composition, polarity)2. temperature3. pressure4. stirring5. surface area of the solute6. some added compounds7. amount of the solute 8. the geometry of the beaker
A solute is something that dissolves into a solvent. The solvent is the substance present in the greatest amount (there is always more of it) and the solute is always present in a smaller amount. Together they form a solution.
crushing particles of solute
It depends what the substances are.
The "solute" is the substance you are trying to dissolve. The solvent is the substance you are trying to dissolve it in.
The technical term is solubility.
amount of solute dissolve in liter of solvent
Factors affecting solubility:1. the nature of solute/solvent (chemical composition, polarity)2. temperature3. pressure4. stirring5. surface area of the solute6. some added compounds7. amount of the solute 8. the geometry of the beaker