concentrated acid
They are generally called as diluted solutions.
Yes if you are referring to the chemical concentration
If a solution is concentrated a lot of solute is dissolved in the solvent. More solute can still be dissolved, though. If no more solute could be dissolved, you have a saturated solution.
A concentrated solution.
this is called a solution. If the solution is holding as much solute as physically possible, it is called a saturated solution.
Dilute solution, a mixture that has only a little solute dissolved in a certain amount of solvent. Concentrated solution-one that has a lot of solute dissolved in the solvent.
A dilute solution is a solution in which there is a small amount of solute (the thing that gets dissolved) compared to the total amount of possible solute that can be dissolved in the solvent (the thing that does the dissolving). A concentrated solution is when there is a lot or all solute that can possibly fit in the solvent.
When you boil water, the bubbles that you see in the boiling are the dissolved gases (oxygen) being eliminated from ther water. Hence unboiled water has a lot of dissolved gases. Boiled water has very little dissolved gas. Even below a liquids boiling point, the warmer a liquid becomes the less gas it holds in solution. The oceans of the world hold a lot gas in solution, carbon dioxide being one of them. If the oceans warm up, then some of this carbons dioxide will be eliminated into the atmosphere.
Solvent = substance in more abundance. Solute = substance in less abundance. Put a little something in a lot of water. The something is the solute and the water is the solvent. For example, salt water is a solution where the salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
A solution with lots of solvent and only a little solute is said to be a very weak or very dilute solution. This solution will have a very low concentration of the soluble substance within the solvent. It's just that simple, but we need to add a footnote of sorts. It should be understood that this may or may not have anything to do with the solubility of the solute. Let's look at that so you are prepared for more advanced concepts. If only a little bit of a substance can be dissolved or will dissolve in a solvent, it may be close to saturation though there is only a small amount of a substance actually dissolved in the solvent. When investigating this area of chemistry, this will make more sense when looking deeper into the issues with solvents, solutes and solutions.
water gets dissolved into water by rushing water or rapids if there are trees or brush in the water it will help disolve the oxygen in to the water if there is a waterfall located somewhere in the stream or river that will desolve a lot of oxygen
A solution contains two things. A solute (the thing which is dissolved) and the solvent (the thing it's dissolved into). For example to make salt-water, you dissolve the solute (salt) into the solvent (water). A concentrated solution has a lot of solute, compared to the amount of solvent. There are two ways to concentrate a solution. 1) adding more solute. 2) removing some of the solvent (usually through evaporation). A dilute solution is the opposite, it has very little solute in there. The two ways of diluting a solution are; 1) adding more solvent. 2) removing some of the solute. Most solutions have a point of saturation, where the maximum amount of solute has been added. This is the maximum concentration of the solution.