A solution that has a small amount of solute dissolved in it.
To convert make a dillute solution from a concentrated one, take the amount of moles needed for the final solution as mL of concetrated solution, and dillute with water until the desired volume is reached.
Take 83.3 mL and add water up to 1000 mL (12 times as much) The above only helps in one situation... here is the way to do it for any situation Litersc * Molesc / Litersc = Litersd * Molesd / Litersd where subscript c is concentrated and subscript d is dillute. The quicker way to write it is C1V1 = C2V2 so if you are going from 12M and want to go to 1M then it would be: 12M*V1 = 1M*1L Rearrange and solve: V1 = 1ML/12M = 0.0833 L = 83.3 mL
a homogeneous solution MY ANSWER Uh...no! Its a solution! if u dont believe me, look up solution and there you go =) ...a homogenious solution?? WAYTT?? lol
a solution is a mixture as a solution is made only when two substances are mixed together so a solution is definitely a mixture!
it is a solution
dillute
You dillute it with some more of the same solvent used for the 6 percent solution - pressumably water.
To convert make a dillute solution from a concentrated one, take the amount of moles needed for the final solution as mL of concetrated solution, and dillute with water until the desired volume is reached.
An alcohol solution above about 95% alcohol exposed to air will self-dillute down to that level.
Its used for concentration, when you want to dillute something.
Fe + 2HCl --> FeCl2 + H2 You will get a salt, iron II chloride ( ferrous chloride ) and hydrogen gas you may see bubbling out of any solution your reactants are in.
Immediately flush the affected area with water for 10 or so minutes to dillute the concentration. For household ammonia spills, this should be enough.
Due to osmosis, when the cell is in a very dilute external environment, the water in its surroundings will diffuse into the cell to reach equilibrium balancing the solutes in the cell with the dilute environment that the cell is in.
The common method to apply inkjet to canvas is to dillute it in a bucket, adding distilled water and stir slowly.Then spread the canvas and pour the inkjet in the middle and start rolling it slowly which will cause the air bubbles to dissapear.
my guess would be silver... flammable gas would be the pure oxygen released during the chemical reaction. Dilute H2SO4 will react with most metals and usually by a single displacement that causes the release of hydrogen gas (flammable). Iron is a good expamle as well, zinc, aluminum, magnesium. Silver will react with concentrated sulfuric acid but maybe not dillute (depends on concentration), also you will get SO2 which is not flammable like Hydrogen gas.
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Solution A is highly concentrated than solution B.