C6H12O6
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Not if the solution contained only glucose and water.
No. Oil and water would form a heterogeneous mixture. A solution is a homogeneous mixture.
Water will diffuse from solution B to solution A
sugar in water
NaBr is a salt because it has Na in it CuNo32 may be a nonelectrolyte NH3 is a base KOH is a base CaCl2 may be a nonelectrolyte hope that somewhat helps
C6h12o6
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Water sugar solution is a non-electrolyte.
Some examples of a non-electrolyte solution in water would be a solution of sugar, or a solution of urea. These do no ionize in solution and so are non-electrolytes.
Not if the solution contained only glucose and water.
no, unless you mix the sand and salt with water. Sand would not combine in water to form a solution, whereas salt would form a solution.
A solution of water and lime juice would be pretty much the same throughout; it would be homogenous.
Hypotonic.
Water is a physical object and is therefore a substance. Pure water, however, is not a solution or a mixture. Water with dissolved solutes would be a solution and mixture.