Speed is time and time is money. It is nearly always about economics. Also, companies do not like letting customers down and if material was required quickly, this would be another reason for wanting a solute to dissolve quickly.
One solvent is not faster than another, because different solutes require different solvents. If you are using the right solvent, the solute will usually dissolve rapidly. You can also make things dissolve faster by heating the solvent, and by stirring the solution.
all metals on the periodic table don't dissolve obviously and the part on the right labelled non metals do dissolve
Some might think it will dissolve, and they are right but after a week it will only dissolve a little
salt dissolve faster because the baking soda went right to the bottom and the flour dissolved but it look like it did not dissolve because it went right to the bottom
Dissolve and wipe are forms of scene transitions (PowerPoint)
Yes, it is correct.
Acids dissolve any substance faster. So yes MnMs would dissolve faster in an acid based solution. Hope i helped and hope i am right.
Your question is too vague. Anything will dissolve in acid if it is the right acid. You need to specify which acid you're thinking about to get a specific list.
Right now i'm doing it i guess it's okay.
Yes, a solution typically contains a larger amount of solvent compared to the amount of solutes. Solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while solute is the substance that is dissolved in the solvent. The concentration of solutes in a solution is usually lower than the concentration of the solvent.
If I'm reading your question right then the answer is solvent, with the "solid part" being the solute. This is not a good way to think about solvents and solutes however.
no , because the peanut butter is so thick that it cant dissolve unless hot .the vinegar doesn't have the right particles