Oxygen is a solvent and if you want to know what a helium is then it is a solute.
A solute and solvent make up a solution. The solute is the substance that is dissolved in the solvent to form the solution. The solvent is the substance in which the solute is dissolved.
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.
soda is a mixture of carbon dioxide and water(liquid). so its a solvent that is gas and a liquid that is gaseous
no
Oxygenated water is a chemical compound (H2O2) not a solute or solvent. Of course, H2O2 can be a solvent for other compounds but impurities decompose in very short time H2O2.
Oxygen is the solute and nitrogen is the solvent.
Solution of Pond Water= Oxygen + Water
The substance in large amount is the solvent and the substance in the small amount is the solute. So, oxygen being more is the solvent and helium being less is the solute.
the solvent
Reaction in which bubbles are formed in solvent
Solvent. Solvents (usually liquids) dissolve solutes, resulting in a solution. Water is a protic solvent - any solvent that has a hydrogen atom bound to an oxygen or nitrogen group. Basically, it's any solvent that contains the labile H+.
The solvent and the solvent dissolves the solute in a solution
Oxygen is the solvent one, since it has the greater volume of two.
Tell me what else is in the solution. Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a tablespoon of salt--the vinegar is the solvent. Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a thousand liters of water--the water is the solvent. (Solutes can be either solid, liquid or gas--oxygen, a gas; diethylene glycol, a liquid; and salt, a solid, all dissolve in water.)
Neither of both. Gasses never are solvents. Air is a mixture -not a solution- of more gasses, none of them are solvent nor solute. When oxygen dissolves in water then this gas is the solute in water (the solvent).
The solvent is the substance which dissolve the solute; for a sugar solution water is the solvent and sugar the solute.
To calculate the vapor pressure of a solution, you can use Raoult's Law. This law states that the vapor pressure of a solution is equal to the vapor pressure of the pure solvent multiplied by the mole fraction of the solvent in the solution. This formula can be expressed as P(solution) X(solvent) P(solvent), where P(solution) is the vapor pressure of the solution, X(solvent) is the mole fraction of the solvent, and P(solvent) is the vapor pressure of the pure solvent.