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Dissolving is not the same thing as melting. When you dissolve salt in water, for example, neither the salt nor the water melts. In the example of salt in water, salt is the solute and water is the solvent. The salt (which is the solute) is what dissolves (but does not melt).
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
You can make a solute dissolve faster by mixing the solute, heating the solute, or crushing the solute.
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.
Water is a polar molecule. If a solute dissolved in water is polar molecule, it will dissolve in water. If a solute dissolved in water is non-polar like oil it will not dissolve in water.
Dissolving is not the same thing as melting. When you dissolve salt in water, for example, neither the salt nor the water melts. In the example of salt in water, salt is the solute and water is the solvent. The salt (which is the solute) is what dissolves (but does not melt).
No, sugar is the solute. The water is the solvent.Sugar is the solute, (the thing being dissolved) and the water is the solvent, (the thing that the solute is being dissolved in)
You can make a solute dissolve faster by mixing the solute, heating the solute, or crushing the solute.
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.
Water is a polar molecule. If a solute dissolved in water is polar molecule, it will dissolve in water. If a solute dissolved in water is non-polar like oil it will not dissolve in water.
The nature of solute and solvent will determine the solubility. When they are alike, they dissolve easily. A good example is water and sugar.
The Answers to this Question is Brass in a solid form, air in a gas form, and Aqueous in a liquid form.
oil
Solute is any substance that is dissolved in a substance and is present in less quantity than the other substance. If the solute is a solid substance then it is called a solid solute. For example :- sugar dissolve in water, sugar is solid solute.
there are many answers, but this depends on the solvent in which you want the solute to dissolve. If for example you're using water as a solvent, wax doesn't dissolve and neither does wood. If you're using methanol (ethanol) then sugar and salt don't dissolve. Freshly pressed orange juice doesn't dissolve in water or any other freshly pressed juice.
Solvent (such as water).
Hoping your question is "What will speed up the dissolving of a solid solute in water?"The surface area of the solute. Finely ground powder has a higher surface area than larger pieces of solute and will dissolve faster.The temperature of the water. Generally, as temperature increases so does the speed of solution.The type of solute. Some solutes have a higher solubility than others and will generally dissolve faster.How pure the water is. Generally, solutes dissolve faster in pure water, as the water takes in more solute it takes longer to dissolve further solute.The volume of solvent compared to the mass of solute. Larger volumes of water will dissolve a small mass of solute relatively quickly.