Hoping your question is "What will speed up the dissolving of a solid solute in water?"
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
It affects the dissolving speed because you are forcing more water to come in contact with the salt than it would if the salt wasn't moving in the water, causing a faster dissolving speed.
It makes the water molecules move faster.
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
Apex - It makes the water molecules bump into the solute more. ^.^
Break up the solid
It affects the dissolving speed because you are forcing more water to come in contact with the salt than it would if the salt wasn't moving in the water, causing a faster dissolving speed.
in layman's terms: when the water is hot, there is more energy and the water particles are moving faster, thus there is a higher amount of collisions per unit of time with the solute particles (the thing you are dissolving)
solvent: water solute: baking soda
It makes the water molecules move faster.
Salt is the solute (the substance being dissolved) and water is the solvent (the substance doing the dissolving.
It acts as an Solute dissolving in the solvent, i.e. water
To speed up the dissolving of a solute you can, among many options:Heat up the mixtureStir the mixtureAdd more solute, then filter off the excessCrush the solute to give it a greater surface area
The solvent is the substance that is dissolving something else. The solute is what is being dissolved. For example, if you were dissolving salt in water. The water would be the solvent and the salt would be the solute.