1. the nature of solute/solvent
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
effect of temperature on solubility - solid in liquid-most solid become more soluble in a liquid as the temperature rises. effect of pressure on solubility -pressure changes have little effect on solubility if the solute is a liquid or a solid.
The term 'solubility of a solution' is meaningless. Perhaps you mean how do you increase the solubility of a solute in a solvent? In that case, if your solute is a solid, increase the temperature, and if it is a gas, decrease the temperature.
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
solubility increase as the temperature rises rises thus its directly proportional under normal circumstances
When the temperature increase, the kinetic energy of the solid,liquid and gas particles increase. Therefor collisions between solute and solvent particles increase. So solubility of solids increase with temperature. But solubility of gasses decrease.
effect of temperature on solubility - solid in liquid-most solid become more soluble in a liquid as the temperature rises. effect of pressure on solubility -pressure changes have little effect on solubility if the solute is a liquid or a solid.
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
No answer
strong attraction of solute particles to solvent particles
The term 'solubility of a solution' is meaningless. Perhaps you mean how do you increase the solubility of a solute in a solvent? In that case, if your solute is a solid, increase the temperature, and if it is a gas, decrease the temperature.
Each solute has a limit of solubility in a liquid, at a given temperature and pressure. The undissolved solute is a solid residue.
The solubility of gas increases in cold water. The solubility of solid increases in hot water.
The most important effect is temperature. As temperature increases, the solubility of most solid solutes increases. At different temperature, the Ksp value for salts fluctuates. With the Ksp value of the solute, you can determine the concentrations of the ions formed. Surface area also plays an important part. The more surface area, the faster a solute will dissolve
Solubility is the ability of a substance (solute) to make a solution with another substance (solvent). The solvent is usually a liquid, and the solute can be a solid, liquid, or gas. The solute is usually dissolved into the liquid to create the solution.
At the molecular level, temperature is inversely proportional to solubility. As the temperature of a liquid increases, the solubility of gases in that liquid decreases.
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 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