Modern brass is a alloy of copper and zinc. It is found usually in factories and with pink brass that is uncommon.
In brass, which is an alloy of copper and zinc, copper is the solvent (the component present in greater quantity) and zinc is the solute (the component dissolved in the solvent).
Brass is a mixture of two metals (copper and tin) called 'alloy', NOT a solution.
In a brass alloy containing 75 percent copper and 25 percent zinc, copper is the solute. The solute is the component of a solution that is present in a lesser amount and is dissolved into the solvent, which is the component present in a larger amount. Since copper is being dissolved into zinc to form the brass alloy, copper is considered the solute.
the solute is zinc because it is smaller in quantity
a solvent has a greater amount than a solute..
The Answers to this Question is Brass in a solid form, air in a gas form, and Aqueous in a liquid form.
Yes, salt water, brass, and air are examples of solutions. A solution is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances where one substance (solute) is uniformly dispersed in another substance (solvent). In these examples, salt is the solute in salt water, copper and zinc are solutes in brass, and various gases are solutes in air.
It will be a solute only.
Solute!
Brass. If you want to be exact, low brass.
The material dissolved in a solution is called the solute. It is typically present in a smaller amount compared to the solvent, which is the substance in which the solute is dissolved.
The trombone is classified as: low brass, and or brass.