No, solutions can be made with liquid, solid, or gaseous solvents. The solvent is the dissolving medium in which solutes are dispersed to form a homogenous mixture. Different solvents are used based on the solubility of the solute being dissolved.
No, solutions can be made with liquid solvents as well as solid solvents such as water or ethanol. Solid solvents can dissolve solutes to create solutions just like liquid solvents can.
No, solutions can be made with both liquid and solid solvents. In fact, solutions can be formed using gases as well. The key requirement for a solution is for the solute to be evenly distributed within the solvent.
No, silver is a pure element because it is made up of only one type of atom (Ag). It is not composed of different substances mixed together.
Iodine is highly soluble in water. It is also soluble in iodine solutions, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride and carbon disulphide among others.
Cations don't always form soluble compounds. In general, ionic compounds are soluble in very polar solvents such as water and insoluble in nonpolar solvents because the charged ions can be solvated only by polar solvents. Some ionic compounds are insoluble even in water, however.
No, solutions can be made with liquid solvents as well as solid solvents such as water or ethanol. Solid solvents can dissolve solutes to create solutions just like liquid solvents can.
No, solutions can be made with both liquid and solid solvents. In fact, solutions can be formed using gases as well. The key requirement for a solution is for the solute to be evenly distributed within the solvent.
No, silver is a pure element because it is made up of only one type of atom (Ag). It is not composed of different substances mixed together.
solvents are sniffed only
Only some organic solvents have a hallucinogen effect.
Iodine is highly soluble in water. It is also soluble in iodine solutions, chloroform, carbon tetrachloride and carbon disulphide among others.
Benzene is only soluble in other organic solvents. It is not soluble in water or other polar solvents.
Like dissolves like. Polar compounds dissolve in polar solvents and nonpolar compounds dissolve in nonpolar solvents. An exception to this rule, however, is that an electronegative atom can only take four or five carbons into a polar solvent. An alcohol with an alkyl chain seven carbons long, for example, will not be soluble in a polar solvent, even though it is a polar molecule.
Earth is the only planet known to have liquid water oceans on its surface.
Also nonpolar solvents.
The only metal that is liquid at room temperature is Mercury (Hg).
Cations don't always form soluble compounds. In general, ionic compounds are soluble in very polar solvents such as water and insoluble in nonpolar solvents because the charged ions can be solvated only by polar solvents. Some ionic compounds are insoluble even in water, however.