3 percent alcohol
A solution that contains a large amount of solute when compared to the volume of the solvent is called a concentrated solution. Examples of concentrated solutions are hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid. A dilute solution is one where the amount of solute is small compared to the solvent.
The concentration of a solution is typically given in terms of the volume of solution, in liters.
due to dissolution of the particles present in the solution so the volume increases
When enough sugar is dissolved into the solvent (water) , or goes 'in to solution' , that no more will dissolve , the solvent is said to be 'saturated'. The more solvent you have the more sugar you can put into solution. No more sugar will dissolve once the solvent (now your solution) is saturated.
When two substances are dissolved to form a solution, the substance that has a lesser volume is called the solute, while the substance with the greater volume is referred to as the solvent.
Typically, the gas would be the solute and the liquid would be the solvent. But it really depends on what is present in the largest amount. The phase present in the largest volume is the solvent; the other is the solute.
Percent by Volume of Solute in Solvent = Volume Solute/ (Volume Solvent + Volume Solute) * 100% = 48/ 192 = 25%
A solution that contains a large amount of solute when compared to the volume of the solvent is called a concentrated solution. Examples of concentrated solutions are hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid. A dilute solution is one where the amount of solute is small compared to the solvent.
A solution that contains a large amount of solute when compared to the volume of the solvent is called a concentrated solution. Examples of concentrated solutions are hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid. A dilute solution is one where the amount of solute is small compared to the solvent.
The concentration of a solution is typically given in terms of the volume of solution, in liters.
Concentrated solution is a solution that contains a large amount of solute relative to the amount that could dissolve.
lower, solvent, lower, solvent
Adding more solvent to a solution decreases the molarity of the solution. This is based on the principle that initial volume times initial molarity must be equivalent to final volume times final molarity.
The solution has a lower concentration. We can also say that it is dilute. Concentration is the amount of solute over the volume of solvent, thus when a large amount of solvent is used, concentration of the solution is low.
Dilute solution contain small amounts of solute for a certain volume of solvent.
due to dissolution of the particles present in the solution so the volume increases
When enough sugar is dissolved into the solvent (water) , or goes 'in to solution' , that no more will dissolve , the solvent is said to be 'saturated'. The more solvent you have the more sugar you can put into solution. No more sugar will dissolve once the solvent (now your solution) is saturated.