Your question is a little ambiguous. However, in general, there is normality, molality and molarity which each describe the concentration of a solute into a solvent. The fraction of moles of solute to solvent could correctly be termed the "molar fraction" or, "molal fraction" depending on whether the solvent is expressed in volume or weight respectively. By contrast, normality is based on the chemical functionality of the solute, for example a 1M solution of sulfuric acid would be about a 2N solution of acid.
The term for a level of solutes in a solution is called the concentration. A "concentrated" solution has more solutes than a "dilute" solution.
There are two related terms:
The molarity or molar concentration expresses the mass of constituents per volume of solution.
The related term molality expresses the mass of constituents per mass of solvent.
it depends on the solute and solvent, and what you are trying to create
It depends on the amount of of solute. The less solute, the less solvent you need.
This is the concentration of the solute in the solution.
Concentration
This is a concentrated solution.
9:1
The substance that is dissolved in a solution is a solute. A solvent is the dissolving medium in a solution.
1. A solvent and a solute are both parts of a solution.2. The solvent is mostly in majority and, it dissolves a solute in itself to make a solution.
solution ------- Sugar dissolved in water: sugar is the solute, water is the solvent; and the solute plus the solvent - is a solution !
The solute. Solute - the substance (solid, liquid or gas) to be dispersed in the solvent. Solvent - the liquid in which the solute is dissolved. Solution - a mix of the solute and solvent.
Salt is the solute. Water is the solvent in a salt solution.
This is the concentration of the solute in the solution.
Yup. A solution contains a solute and a solvent. In the solution Salt Water, salt is the solute and water the solvent. Concentrated solutions are heavy on the solutes; dilute ones heavy on the solvents.
- temperature - pressure - stirring - the granulation of the solute - the nature of the solvent - the addition of other substances - the volume of the solvent (and the ratio solute/solvent) - etc.
A solution with the same ratio of solute to solvent (concentration) as another solution is called isotonic. If it has more solvent and thus a lower solute concentration, then it is called hypertonic.
the solvent
Adding solvent will make a solution more diluted. Think of it this way. Take water (solvent) and dissolve salt into it (solute). In order to dilute or increase the ratio of solvent to solute, you would add more water.
The substance that is dissolved in a solution is a solute. A solvent is the dissolving medium in a solution.
1. A solvent and a solute are both parts of a solution.2. The solvent is mostly in majority and, it dissolves a solute in itself to make a solution.
Solution: a solute (or more) in a solvent. Solute: the dissolved substance in a solvent. The solute must be soluble in the solvent.
solution ------- Sugar dissolved in water: sugar is the solute, water is the solvent; and the solute plus the solvent - is a solution !
A solvent and a solute.
The solute. Solute - the substance (solid, liquid or gas) to be dispersed in the solvent. Solvent - the liquid in which the solute is dissolved. Solution - a mix of the solute and solvent.