Water?
Aqueous solutions are solutions in which water is the solvent. Anything that dissolves in water forms an aqueous solution.
Salt forms a solution when added to water.
This compound is an electrolyte.
Simple phenol (Carbolic acid) is almost colourless in aqueous solution but Naphthols forms pinkish or purple solutions.
it goes back to normal
Weigh 10g of the given sample and dissolve it in 100ml of water, it forms a 10% solution of that sample.
Yes. Carbon dioxide forms carbonic acid in an aqueous (water based) solution.
Yes. When mixed with water in a solution it forms an organic layer ontop of the aqueous (water) layer.
Lithium is a good conductor in its normal ionic state but in aqueous solutions, it forms very large molecule by attracting lots of water ions to itself. Its ionic size in aqueous solution is even greater than the size of cesium ion in water. This increased ionic size in aqueous solution reduces its mobility in the solution and reducing its conductivity.
Table salt is NaCl while water is H2O. Also water is liquid while salt is solid..... if that isn't obvious
That depends on what you are talking about. There will be no mixing of salt and sugar just as solids, but if they were in aqueous solution, you can force a chemical reaction.
Yes, it is. Silver chlorate is soluble and forms an aqueous oxidizing solution. In its dry state, it is a relatively weak explosive chemical.