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For example a carbonated water containing carbon dioxide as a solute.
from suspensions solute may be removed by simple filtration as the suspended clay particles from water.
Yup. A solution contains a solute and a solvent. In the solution Salt Water, salt is the solute and water the solvent. Concentrated solutions are heavy on the solutes; dilute ones heavy on the solvents.
Hoping your question is "What will speed up the dissolving of a solid solute in water?"The surface area of the solute. Finely ground powder has a higher surface area than larger pieces of solute and will dissolve faster.The temperature of the water. Generally, as temperature increases so does the speed of solution.The type of solute. Some solutes have a higher solubility than others and will generally dissolve faster.How pure the water is. Generally, solutes dissolve faster in pure water, as the water takes in more solute it takes longer to dissolve further solute.The volume of solvent compared to the mass of solute. Larger volumes of water will dissolve a small mass of solute relatively quickly.
The solvent is usually the larger part of the solution which dissolves the solute. The solute is the smaller part which gets dissolved. So as an example, seawater is a solution. The solvent is water and the solute is salt and traces of other minerals. Vinegar is also a solution. Again, water is the solvent and glacial acetic acid is the solute. To do acid values in resin chemistry, methanolic KOH solution is usually the titrant. In this example, methanol is the solvent and KOH is the solute.
For example a carbonated water containing carbon dioxide as a solute.
Solution: Dextrose 5% in water for injection.Solute: DextroseSolvent: Water for injection.
from suspensions solute may be removed by simple filtration as the suspended clay particles from water.
Yup. A solution contains a solute and a solvent. In the solution Salt Water, salt is the solute and water the solvent. Concentrated solutions are heavy on the solutes; dilute ones heavy on the solvents.
Hoping your question is "What will speed up the dissolving of a solid solute in water?"The surface area of the solute. Finely ground powder has a higher surface area than larger pieces of solute and will dissolve faster.The temperature of the water. Generally, as temperature increases so does the speed of solution.The type of solute. Some solutes have a higher solubility than others and will generally dissolve faster.How pure the water is. Generally, solutes dissolve faster in pure water, as the water takes in more solute it takes longer to dissolve further solute.The volume of solvent compared to the mass of solute. Larger volumes of water will dissolve a small mass of solute relatively quickly.
The solvent is usually the larger part of the solution which dissolves the solute. The solute is the smaller part which gets dissolved. So as an example, seawater is a solution. The solvent is water and the solute is salt and traces of other minerals. Vinegar is also a solution. Again, water is the solvent and glacial acetic acid is the solute. To do acid values in resin chemistry, methanolic KOH solution is usually the titrant. In this example, methanol is the solvent and KOH is the solute.
This depends on the concentration and the nature of the solute. For an identical concentration flavored water is evaporated faster.
Water is made up of polar molecules linked together by hydrogen bonds. When polar solute is dissolved in water it will readily dissolve in water. If non-polar solute is dissolved in water like any type of oils for instance then it will not dissolve in water.
Solute = H2O(g), solvent = air (mostly N2 and O2 gas)
Osmosis is the diffusion of water or another solvent from a more dilute solution (of a solute) to a more concentrated solution (of the solute) through a membrane that is permeable to the solvent.
Acetone may be considered the solute and air the solvent.
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