Yes, but this also depends on the chemical composition of the solvent and the conditions under which the dissolution occurs.
The bond forming process is always exothermic.
Breaking a chemical bond is endothermic and making a bond is exothermic.
Exothermic reactions
Exothermic (gives off heat - and light!).
An endothermal (or endothermic) process is the name of the process in which heat is taken in. In an exothermal (or exothermic) process, heat is released.
It is not a chemical reaction, it is dissolution; this physical process is exothermic.
Not obligatory; the dissolution of sodium, calcium, potassium chlorides are exothermic.
The bond forming process is always exothermic.
An endothermic reaction contains more chemical energy.
The opposite of exothermic is endothermic. Exothermic reactions are those which give off energy in the form of heat. Endothermic reactions require energy.
Exothermic reactions
Breaking a chemical bond is endothermic and making a bond is exothermic.
EXOTHERMIC because the electrons flow from one to another so its exothermic NOT endothermic! B/c it RELEASES energy!
Exothermic. Its a heater.
Exothermic (gives off heat - and light!).
It depends on whether or not the chemical reaction is exothermic or endothermic. If exothermic, then yes, energy is released. If endothermic, then no, energy is absorbed, not released.
... is an exothermic reaction (opposite of 'endothermic')