Gasoline is an organic solvent
The solvent is water- usually carbonated water. There are several solutes- mainly sugar.
Gasoline does not have a solvent, as it is commonly used, and it does not need a solvent. This is because gasoline is not a solid that needs dissolving, it is a liquid hydrocarbon already and is a solvent more than it can ever be a solvent.
Gasoline is an organic compound and it is the solvent of organic solutes. Petroleum jelly will dissolve in gasoline because both petroleum jelly and gasoline are hydrocarbons.
I'm not sure what you mean, commercial gasoline is a blend of linear and aromatic hydrocarbons averaging about 8 carbon atoms per molecule with various additives for various purposes (e.g. keep engine clean, reduce pollutants, stabilize mixture, improve starting in cold weather). Gasoline is a solvent, but if you was a solvent for cleaning parts there are far safer ones that work as well.
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
Pls answer this
The solute becomes dissolved in the solvent, while the solvent dissolves the solute.
A solvent and a solute.
what is the solute and solvent in corn syrup
what is the solvent and solute of milo
No; the solute is dissolved in the solvent.