Want this question answered?
yes
The rate of dissolving would be temperature dependent.
When a solid, liquid , or gas is dissolved in another substance, the result is a solution.
Not usually size, its the surface area
The process of dissolving is a physical change. This is because the process can be simply reversed. With a chemical change a new substance is formed and the process can not be simply reversed.
It will increase it, as more of the outer surface of the solid is incontact with the liquid that it is dissolving in. :)
increases
The solid is dissociated in ions.
If the temperature of the area the dissolving solid is in is warm, the air can make the dissolving solid warm too, and eventually completely dissolve the object.
yes
Break up the solid
is dissolving a chemical or physical changeWell, it is not. Because you are not changing the chemical identity of the solid. It's still solid chemically and water chemically.
Dissolving?
by the process of fractional distillation
ಠ_ಠ Really? It's called DISSOLVING.
heat
There are three ways in which the dissolving of a solid in a solution can be increased. 1) Use a powered form of the solid, this increases the surface area that is exposed to the solvent. 2) Heat the mixture up. 3) Agitate the mixture (stir it).