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.
The ratio of observed solubility to that of equilibrium solubility is the degree of supersaturation
Not soluble in water
no, it is solubility
The movement of the particles in the solute and between solute and solvent are amplified at higher temperature and the solubility increase.
When it is on movement it has more energy ---------------------- The solubilty of gases in liquids is increased when the temperature is lowered and the pressure is increased.
Apparent solubility represents the solubility one observed during the experiment while the intrinsic solubility meant to the real or true solubility.
The solubility of a material in water is how much the object can absorb.
Saturation and solubility is the same. They both meant to point out the maximum of solute dissolved through out the solvent.
Solubility is the ability of a substance to dissolve completely in another substance. The substance that dissolves is called the solute. If the solute has a high solubility, then it easily dissolves in most substances to create a solution. If the solute has a low solubility, then it does not dissolve easily and rarely goes into solution with other substances.
There is no such thing as "surface area" of "solubility" since the latter refers to the maximum concentration in the solution of a solid (or liquid) in a liquid. "Surface area", as applied to such a phenomenon is meaningless. However, by *increasing* the surface area of, say, a salt, by grinding it, will increase its solubility. Maybe *that* is what the questioner meant.
Solubility is the ability of a substance to dissolve completely in another substance. The substance that dissolves is called the solute. If the solute has a high solubility, then it easily dissolves in most substances to create a solution. If the solute has a low solubility, then it does not dissolve easily and rarely goes into solution with other substances.
Nothing. Solubility depends of temperature and pressure, not surface area. At the same temperature and pressure C02 has the same solubility, whether you have 10 cm square surface area or 1000 cm2. Maybe you meant the rate of diffusion?
if an object is aqueous it can dissolve
The ability of one substance to dissolve in another substance is called SOLUBILITY.
The ability of a solute to dissolve in a solvent at a certain temperature is called solubility. The solubility of most solids in water increases with temperature increases.
Solubility is a noun.
solubility decreases