Water and basically any other liquid.
A solvent is a liquid for example water is a solvent hope this helps. :)
Liquid carbon dioxide (supercritical CO2) is used as solvent.
No. The "solvent" is the liquid that does makes the solid dissolve.For example, in a solution of salt water, the solvent is "water", and the solute is salt.
soda is a mixture of carbon dioxide and water(liquid). so its a solvent that is gas and a liquid that is gaseous
A solute is the solid that is dissolved in a liquid. The solvent is the liquid in which something is dissolved in. For example, with salt water, the Na and Cl are the two solutes, and the H2O is the solvent. Also They Both Make A Solution. For example, to make a solution out of saltwater, you would take salt, which would be your solute, and water, which would be your solvent. To be more precise, a solvent is what does the dissolving and the solute is what is being dissolved. the answer above is not incorrect per se, just not all inclusive. an example not described by the previous answer is that of carbon dioxide dissolving in water. therefore, the solute does not have to be a solid. further the solvent doesnt have to be liquid. the solvent can be a liquid or a gas and the solute can be a solid, liquid, or gas.
It is a solvent liquid. For example, water is a solvent as it can dissolve sugar crystals (and many other things).
a liquid solid in a solid is example of an important collodial system called solid emulsion or gel. butter is one where liquid is water and solid is fat, oher eg: flesh
A solute is the substance being dissolved (example, sugar). The solvent is the liquid into which is it dissolved (example, coffee)A solute is present in a smaller amount and a solvent is present in a greater amount in a solution.
It is called a solvent, the substance being dissolved is a solute.
Some solute-solvent combinations are: example (solute state-solvent state) oxygen in nitrogen (gas-gas) carbon dioxide in water (gas-liquid) water vapor in air (liquid-gas) alcohol in water (liquid-liquid) mercury in silver and tin, dental amalgam (liquid-solid) sugar in water (solid-liquid) copper in nickel (MonelTM alloy) (solid-solid)
An example of a solution where the solute and solvent are not easily distinguishable is a metal alloy, such as bronze. In bronze, copper is the solvent and tin is the solute, but they are completely mixed at the atomic level, resulting in a uniform composition throughout the mixture.
Solvent and solute. The solute is the substance added that makes the solution what it is (for example, solid table salt), while the solvent is the liquid to which the solute is added (for example, water or an alcohol). The majority of solutions we encounter regularly are aqueous, meaning that the solvent is water. In aqueous solutions, if the solute is a salt, the salt will dissociate into its ions, with water molecules separating them from each other.