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Q: What phase of matter can act as a solvent?
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Related questions

Why solvent is used in Paper chromatography?

In chromatography you need one stationery phase (paper) and one mobile phase (here solvent, moving by capillary forces)


What is the moving solvent called in chromatography?

Mobile phase.


What is the solvent and solute of sugar water?

the solvent is the water; while the solute is the sugar


In a solution do the solute and solvent exist at the same temperature?

phase


What phase of matter consits of vibrating in place?

the solid phase of matter


What is Jupiter's phase of matter?

Jupiter's phase of matter is a 'gas giant'.


Mobile phase in relation to chromatography?

a moving or mobile phase is a mixture you want to separate , dissolved in a solvent.


Is smoke a example of matter?

Yes, particulate matter in the solid phase and matter in the gaseous phase.


What is the 4th phase of matter?

some people soy that there is no 4 phase of matter but some say plasma is the 4 phase of matter


What is Thin Layer Chromatography?

Thin-layer chromatography consists of a stationary phase immobilised on a glass or plastic plate and a solvent as mobile phase. The sample, either liquid or dissolved in a volatile solvent, is deposited as a spot on the stationary phase. The constituents of a sample can be identified by simultaneously running standards with the unknown spot. One edge of the plate is then vertically placed in a solvent reservoir and the solvent moves up the plate by capillary action. When the solvent front reaches the other edge of the stationary phase, the plate is removed from the solvent reservoir. The separated spots are then visualized with ultraviolet light or by a suitable reaction procedure....:)


What phase of matter are metamorphic rocks?

All rocks are in the solid phase of matter.


What forms when one substance is insoluble or does not dissolve in a solvent?

When a substance is insoluble or does not dissolve in a solvent, it forms a separate phase. This can be in the form of a solid settling at the bottom (sedimentation), particles suspended in the solvent (suspension), or a separate layer on top (immiscibility or phase separation).