water.....
The amount of solute that can be dissolved in a solvent has many factors. These include: the strength of the solvent, the temperature of the solvent, whether the solute is soluble or not. There is no definite answer to the question.
We can identify which solvent can strip solute particles with the greatest surface if we have the option to choose from. This statement is not a definition, it is an analogy question for a given situation.
A solvent will only dissolve enough solute to reach its saturation point. Exact quantities are defined by the nature of the specific solvent ant solute, and the prevailing environmental conditions.
A solvent will only dissolve enough solute to reach its saturation point. Exact quantities are defined by the nature of the specific solvent ant solute, and the prevailing environmental conditions.
solubility of that salt
A solute is the substance to be dissolved in a solvent to give a solution.
A solute is something that dissolves into a solvent. The solvent is the substance present in the greatest amount (there is always more of it) and the solute is always present in a smaller amount. Together they form a solution.
Sugar or water is the Solvent in Sweet Tea. The solvent is the substance that exists in the greatest quantity of a solution, so I think it's definitely sugar or water not sure though.
Its called a solute
Solute!
It will be a solute only.
A solvent and a solute.