Sugar is soluble in water forming a sugar solution. The sugar would be the solute. The water would be the solvent.
It is soluble but does take a little effort to get it into solution.
No. Chalk is insoluble in water. Adding sugar will not change that.
AgI (silver iodide) is slightly soluble in water, with a solubility of about 0.21 g/L at 25°C. However, it is considered insoluble when compared to other salts like NaCl.
Well- sand drops to the bottom, so insoluble. Sugar dissolves in water- warm water dissolves it quicker (coffee, tea), oil sits in layer on the top so does not dissolve. Glass- well luckily glass is insoluble in water so coke and stuff like that can be contained in glass bottles. A purist who measures solubility in atoms or molecules per litre would argue that that all of the insoluble substances dissolve too some extent.
Sodium carbonate, known as soda ash in its anhydrous form, is very soluble in water.
permeable
It is soluble but does take a little effort to get it into solution.
Silver acetate (AgC2H3O2) is slightly soluble in water. It can dissolve to a small extent, but it is considered insoluble for practical purposes because only a small amount dissolves.
ZnS is insoluble in water because it forms a sparingly soluble compound due to the strong bond between zinc and sulfur ions. Only a very small amount of ZnS can dissolve in water to form a solution.
No, they are both soluable in water
No. Chalk is insoluble in water. Adding sugar will not change that.
No because sugar is insoluble solid.
No, because it's soluble.
AgI (silver iodide) is slightly soluble in water, with a solubility of about 0.21 g/L at 25°C. However, it is considered insoluble when compared to other salts like NaCl.
Something that is soluble can dissolve in a liquid (like sugar in water), but something that insoluble cannot (like rocks in water).
insoluble example: sugar dissolves into water
Sand will not dissolve in water.