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.
if more solvent is added to the solution the concentration of the solute decreases
Yes, you can dilute a solution by adding more solvent.
Add water to the solution
in any solution the substanse with the greatest quanity is the
A solution (from the verb to solve), is the answer to a question, problem, or disagreement.ChemistryA solution consists of one or more liquid, gaseous, or solid substances added to another, usually a liquid, so as to form a homogeneous mixture (a dissolving).
It is usually added during an extraction in order to make the solution alkaline. Often times, this aids in the efficiency of the extraction.
Oxygen is a solvent and if you want to know what a helium is then it is a solute.
Iodine is added to a solution of white phosphorus in carbon disulfide as solvent to form phosphorus triiodide. P4 + 6I2 → 4PI3
When more solvent is added to a solution to decrease it's concentration the action is known as dilution.
The solution becomes more diluted and the concentration gets higher.
If the solid is soluble in that particular solvent, yes you will get a solution.
When soap is added to water, water is the solvent
I presume from category that the question ask about the heat of dissolution. Assume the solvent and solution is at thermal equilibrium. Adding more solvent would yield change in interaction for non ideal solution and thus it could yield increase or decrease of temperature depend on the infinite heat of solution of the solute that we interested in. Adding more solvent would not yield temperature change for ideal solution.
If the solute is soluble, it will dissolve in the solvent.
I presume from category that the question ask about the heat of dissolution. Assume the solvent and solution is at thermal equilibrium. Adding more solvent would yield change in interaction for non ideal solution and thus it could yield increase or decrease of temperature depend on the infinite heat of solution of the solute that we interested in. Adding more solvent would not yield temperature change for ideal solution.
Saturation is the point a solution reaches where no more solute will dissolve in the solvent.
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.
a solute and solvent are added together to form a solution. the solvent is the liquid and the solute is the substance that is dissolved by the solvent and together, they form a solution! yay!!
When a solute is added to a solvent until no more dissolves, the solution is said to be saturated. In some cases a solution can be made to be supersaturated by temporarily increasing the solubility of the solvent, such as through an increase in temperature.
solute and solvent together constitutes a solution