You mean solution right, not solutipon? lol
It is called the van't Hoff factor (i)
no, a solution is when the particles(cereal) are fully dissolved in the liquid , but they arent
The Molecules
If you mean, "Why does filtering not separate a solute from a solution," then the answer is: Filtering is a mechanical process to remove physical particles of solid matter. If something is dissolved, like salt (the solute) in water (the solution) there are no physical particles of matter to remove - the salt is chemically dissolved and in solution.
The best example is the solution of sugar and water . When sugar is mixed repeatedly in water continuosly then a point comes where further it sugar dont get dissolved. Then the amount of sugar dissolved is the solution and the rest sugar is solvent .
A solution is simply a type of homogenous mixture. There are three common types of homogenous mixtures: suspension mixtures, colloids, and solutions. A solution consists of the smallest particles of these three, and those particles are dissolved in a liquid. The substance that dissolves is called the solute, and the substance in which they are dissolved is called the solvent. So a solution is a type of mixture, not a part.
I need this too. I've read that it may be the Van't Hoff factor.
They are in solution.
no, a solution is when the particles(cereal) are fully dissolved in the liquid , but they arent
Isotonic
The Molecules
isotonic solution
isotonic solution
Solvent
distilation
The solute is the substance dissolved in a solvent.
Distillation
If you mean, "Why does filtering not separate a solute from a solution," then the answer is: Filtering is a mechanical process to remove physical particles of solid matter. If something is dissolved, like salt (the solute) in water (the solution) there are no physical particles of matter to remove - the salt is chemically dissolved and in solution.