A stirred supersaturated solution can be considered as a suspension.
Solution actually. Cordial is itself a solution, so adding water to it just changes concentration.
Typically, water will dilute a solution. However, that said, it also depends what you're adding the water to, ex. adding water to oil won't dilute in the same ways.
No, adding water to a solution does not change the molarity of the solute. The molarity of a solution is calculated using the amount of solute and the volume of the solution, so diluting with water only changes the volume, not the amount of solute present.
Yes, when Berocca is dissolved in water, it forms a solution, not a suspension. In a solution, the solute (Berocca) dissolves completely in the solvent (water), whereas in a suspension, the solute particles remain suspended in the solvent and can settle over time.
When sugar is added to water, the sugar dissolves into the water to form a sugar-water solution. This increases the sweetness of the water. The physical properties of the water, such as boiling and freezing points, also change due to the presence of sugar molecules in the solution.
seawater solution or suspension
seawater solution or suspension
Water is a chemical compound.
solution
It is a suspension.
Removing salt from water is a process, not solution/suspension. Salt form with water solutions.
solution
Its is a solution if the sugar is dissolved.
Super saturated sugar and water has a sugar- water solution and a suspension of sugar particles
Solution actually. Cordial is itself a solution, so adding water to it just changes concentration.
Typically, water will dilute a solution. However, that said, it also depends what you're adding the water to, ex. adding water to oil won't dilute in the same ways.
Yes. Sand in water will produce a suspension