The solvent may be the air and the solute is water.
No, not every solvent can dissolve every solute. The ability of a solvent to dissolve a solute depends on the chemical properties of both the solvent and the solute.
In a solution of sugar and water, water is the solvent and sugar is the solute. The solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while the solute is the substance that is being dissolved.
Sand is a solute. Solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while solute is the substance that is dissolved in the solvent. In the case of sand, it does not dissolve in a solvent but rather remains as solid particles in the mixture.
It is called a solute, which is dissolved in a solvent
The Kool-Aid is the solute because the solute is the thing that dissolves, and the water is the solvent because the solvent is the thing that dissolves something. Solute=Kool-Aid Solvent=Water
The solute in rain clouds is water vapor. The solvent is the air in the atmosphere. When the water vapor in the cloud condenses into liquid water droplets, it falls to the ground as rain.
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
The solvent dissolves the solute. (The solute dissolves in the solvent.)
Pls answer this
The solute becomes dissolved in the solvent, while the solvent dissolves the solute.
A solvent and a solute.
what is the solute and solvent in corn syrup
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
In the context of a rain cloud, the solvent is water, which forms the primary component of the cloud. The solute can be considered the various substances dissolved or suspended in the water, such as salts, pollutants, or other aerosols. When these droplets coalesce and grow large enough, they fall as precipitation, which is essentially a solution of water and its dissolved constituents. Thus, rain can be seen as a mixture of water (solvent) with various solutes.
No; the solute is dissolved in the solvent.
the solvent
In fog, the solvent is air (specifically water vapor) and the solute is water droplets. Fog forms when water vapor in the air condenses into tiny liquid droplets, creating a misty cloud near the ground.