Liquid + Liquid = Solution
Liquid + Solid = Suspension
Two completely miscible liquids form a homegeneous solution.
At the boiling point liquids become gases and if the solution contain dissolved solids they remain as residues.
vaporization
Both. Liquids become combined in a solution and solids form a mechanical mixture until after time breaks down everything.
Five facts: 1. When liquids cool down, they become solids. 2. When gases cool down, they become liquids. 3. When solids heat up, they become liquids. 4. When liquids heat up, they become gases. 5. Some liquids will only freeze in temperatures that can never be recreated by humans.
Though both can act as fluids liquids are a different and much cooler state of matter. Gases must first become liquids before they can become solids.
Adding more solute the solution become supersaturated.
Solids become liquids when the temperature reaches melting point, groups of particles start to brake away from each other. This is when the solid starts becoming a liquid. Liquids become solids on cooling, the particles move slower and become a solid.
The dilute solution become a concentrated solution.
Liquids become solids upon freezing. Most solids contract when they freeze. The expansion of water when it becomes ice is an unusual property.
Such liquids have high density, good electrical conductivity and become solid as temperature decreases from their melting point.
Increasing the pressure will lead to more gas dissolving in the solution, and decreasing the pressure will cause the gas to come out of the solution. This is described by Henry's Law, which states that the solubility of a gas in a liquid is directly proportional to the pressure of the gas above the liquid.