Clear and colorless mean different things in chemistry. Clear means you can see through it. Colorless means it's not colored (i.e. it's either white or looks like water).
I have this vague sense that all true solutions (as opposed to suspensions or emulsions) are clear, but I can't readily find definitive confirmation of that.
D5NM is a clear or colorless solution.
A solution can still contain color, but also be clear. Take a pool for example, the water is slightly blue but you can still see through it. A colorless solution is when there is no color, like water in a store bought water bottle.
Its Colorless
none, it is clear
crystal clear
D5NM is a clear or colorless solution.
A solution can still contain color, but also be clear. Take a pool for example, the water is slightly blue but you can still see through it. A colorless solution is when there is no color, like water in a store bought water bottle.
Its Colorless
none, it is clear
crystal clear
Copper sulfate solution is clear and blue Water is clear and colorless
The color of a sodium sulfate solution in water is colorless. Sodium sulfate is a white and crystalline solid that dissolves in water to form a clear and colorless solution.
Sodium silicate solution is typically colorless or clear with a slight yellow tint. Ammonia is also colorless.
Depends of the salt in solution. The sodium chloride solution is colourless, the uranyl nitrate solution is yellow, etc.
Lithium chloride is a colorless compound in its solid form. In solution, it usually appears as a clear or slightly yellowish liquid.
The color of a solution containing H2O and ZnCl2 would likely be clear or colorless. Both water and zinc chloride are transparent substances, so the solution would not exhibit a distinct color.
Colorless