i don't know no it might b jens
warm, polar solvent
This depends on the nature of the solute and solvent. Excepting gases, increasing the temperature the solubility increase.
The type of solvent that is best suited to dissolve an ionic or a highly polar solvent would also be highly polar, probably a polar protic solvent like water or alcohol.
The best solvent of NaCl is water.
It is called a solute, which is dissolved in a solvent
Pour an ionic solid into water and see if it vanishes. (Because it has the ability to dissolve.)
It is water.
Like dissolves like meaning that a polar substance will dissolve a polar substance and nonpolar substance will dissolve other polar substances. By contrast nonpolar and polar substances will not dissolve one another.
A solvent is a substance that can dissolve an other substance. Water is one of the best solvents in fact it is often called the "universal" solvent. It is the structure of water that makes it such a great solvent. Because water is polar it will disolve other polar molicules as well as ionic compounds.
When you mix soda and salt the solute and the solvent would be a variety of things. The best answer i could tell you is that the solute would be the carbonated water and the solvent would be the salt. Or it is the other way around.
No. Ionic bonds dissolve in water the best.
Rub some of their solvent over them. Every glue except epoxy has a solvent.