Solution.
Yes, because ice tea is the solvent in a glass or something but the answer is definitely yes iced tea is a solution.
Well, I believe that in referring to placing sugar in iced tea, tea is the solvent, and sugar the solute. Technically, however, the question is flawed, as tea can be a solute as well, with water as the solvent and the organic compounds released from steeping the tea leaves the solute.
Yes, because ice tea is the solvent in a glass or something but the answer is definitely yes iced tea is a solution.
The iced tea is the solvent, or the majority component of the solution, while the sugar is the solute, or the minority component that dissolves in the solvent.
The iced tea is already an aqueous solution. The sugar becomes an additional solute added to the water, which is the solvent.
In this case, the solvent of the Jordan iced tea solution is water, as it makes up 96 percent of the total solution. The sugar, caffeine, and other tea flavors are the solutes, which are dissolved in the water. The water acts as the medium in which the solutes are dispersed, making it the solvent in this solution.
In amount, yes. Both are one glass. Nutritionally, the iced tea has more in it than the water. Iced tea is likely to have lots of sugar and has some of the antioxidants found in tea. . no just have plain water !!!
Iced tea is not a strict solution; some components of the tea are dissolved in the water, whereas others are distributed as microscopic particles, in a colloidal suspension, and still larger particles are temporarily suspended but will settle out as the tea sits. So, in iced tea, some chemicals from the tea are a solute, but the rest of the tea (after filtering out the large chunks of leaves) is merely suspended in the water.
Iced tea is not a soda at all it is a herbal cold tea.
I have checked the density of tea personnaly. It is 0.52 gm/cm3.
Iced tea and pineapple juice