Yes. I mean you don't urinate any solids, do you?
You may need to heat the water to dissolve urea at a high concentration. The dissolution of urea in water is endothermic (the hot water will cool as urea dissolves!)
Hydrolysed urea solution isbasic.
yes.
YES
Some of the examples of endothermic reactions in everyday life are following: 1) Melting of ice 2) Evaporation of water 3) Dissolution of urea
The dissolution of potassium nitrate in water is an endothermic process.
The dissolution is an endothermic process.
Dissolution is an exothermic reaction.
Yes, but this also depends on the chemical composition of the solvent and the conditions under which the dissolution occurs.
Some of the examples of endothermic reactions in everyday life are following: 1) Melting of ice 2) Evaporation of water 3) Dissolution of urea
The dissolution is endothermic.
The dissolution of potassium nitrate in water is an endothermic process.
Dissolution for most substances is endothermic.
When ammonium chloride dissolves in water, it is not a reaction at all, but only a dissolution. Since the solution formed feels cold, the dissolution is endothermic, absorbing heat from its surroundings.
The dissolution is an endothermic process.
It is not a chemical reaction, it is dissolution; this physical process is exothermic.
its endothermic
Dissolution is an exothermic reaction.
Dissolution of sodium chloride in water is an exothermic process.
it becomes hotter, therefore exothermic.
Because one of the two endothermic steps (separation of the solute particles) in the solution-formation process is unnecessary.