A general principal to follow is like dissolves like. For instance, water, a polar molecule with a small charge distribution, is very good at dissolving ionic compounds, which are made of charged ions.
This depend on the solute and the specific solvent.
A solvent cannot dissolve. You can dissolve a solute in a solvent, e.g. you can dissolve sugar in water - sugar is the solute, and water is the solvent. You cannot dissolve water though.
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.
The solute that can dissolve any solvent.
The "solute" is the substance you are trying to dissolve. The solvent is the substance you are trying to dissolve it in.
No; the solute is dissolved in the solvent.
It depends on the polarity of the solute and the solvent. If the solute is polar, then it will only dissolve in a polar solvent If the solute in nonpolar, then it will only dissolve in a nonpolar solvent
This depend on the solute and the specific solvent.
A solvent cannot dissolve. You can dissolve a solute in a solvent, e.g. you can dissolve sugar in water - sugar is the solute, and water is the solvent. You cannot dissolve water though.
A substance that can dissolve in particular solvent is called a solute. The resulting mixture is called a solution. A general rule is that "like dissolves like." If a solute is polar, it will need a polar solvent to fully dissolve it.
You dissolve a solute in a 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.
If you will heat the solvent, the undissolved solute will dissolve.
question itself is wrong, chloroform is solute and ccl4 is solvent, solute should dissolve in solvent and solvent cannot dissolve in solute
The solute that can dissolve any solvent.
The solvent is the substance which dissolve the solute; for a sugar solution water is the solvent and sugar the solute.
Basically, yes. But only sometimes. The solute is indeed the material you have less of, and the solvent is the material in which you try to dissolve that solute. Sometimes, however, you cannot dissolve the solute.