if the water is hot,the solvent will dissolve faster and when it gets stirred it will dissolve even faster than when it wasn't. but if the water is cold it will dissolve slower than hot water even when stirred.
The temperature the solvent used
Solubility can be increased in solvent and by adding more solute.
When you increase the temperature the solubility of a solute in a solution increases. This is due to the fact that heat is required to break the bonds that are holding the molecules in the solid together. Note that the opposite is true for gases, though.
Some things:Agitation: As in, the number of collisions within the molecules. This is why we stir when we are dissolving something.. more collision will increase rate.Temperature: The higher the temperature, the more energy the solution will have, hence more space between the molecules because they move around so much. This means more kinetic energy.Surface area: Meaning the area of contact within the solute and the solvent. More surface area = faster dissolving.
There are several factors:1) the polarity of the substance and the polarity of the solvent (like dissolves like).2) the temperature of the solvent (for solids, the higher the temperature of the solvent, the higher the solubility -- sugar in hot tea dissolves more easily than in iced tea -- but often for gases, the solubility goes down at higher temperature -- and why soda goes flat when its warm).3) Pressure also effects solubility. Notice CO2 will form bubbles when you open the cap of a soda can. A side note.....the size of the particles and whether or not you stir the solution will help speed up the dissolving process, but it will notchange the total amount that can be dissolved (whereas #1 and #2 do affect the total amount dissolved)Lesson 4: Colligative Properties of Solutions:a. Temperature and nature of solute and solventb. A large amount of soluteb. Molarity x Litersd. 0.18Mb. Supersaturationb. Disrupts Crystal formation of the solventd. 142 mLGuaranteed 100%
Increasing the temperature of a solvent decreases the solubility of a gas Generally, increasing solvent temperature decreases the solubility of gases.
1. Quantity 2. Temperature 3. Dissolution method First, the quantity of the solvent will affect solubility. Second, the temperature of the solvent will affect solubility. Third, the method of dissolution such as by shaking, stirring, sonics, or just letting it sit will affect solubility.
The three factors that affect the solubility of a substance are temperature, pressure (for gases), and the type of solvent used. Generally, solubility increases with higher temperatures for solid solutes but may vary for gas solutes. Additionally, the nature of the solvent plays a significant role in determining solubility.
Pressure, type of solvent, temperature
It becomes super saturated
Temperature can affect the solubility of a solute in a solvent. Generally, an increase in temperature can increase the solubility of solids in a solvent, while it can decrease the solubility of gases in a solvent. This is because higher temperatures provide more energy for the solute particles to overcome intermolecular forces and dissolve in the solvent.
Factors such as temperature, stirring/mixing, surface area of the solid, and the nature of the solvent can affect the rate at which a substance dissolves. Cooler temperatures, lack of stirring, smaller surface area, and low solubility of the solute in the solvent can slow down the dissolving process.
Solubility of a substance is affected by pressure, type of solvent, and temperature.
Factors that affect the solubility of materials include temperature, pressure, polarity of the solvent and solute, surface area of the solute, and agitation of the solution. Temperature generally increases solubility for most solids in liquids, pressure has little effect on solid solubility but can impact gas solubility, and polar solvents tend to dissolve polar solutes.
The temperature the solvent used
Three factors that affect solubility are temperature (usually increasing temperature increases solubility), pressure (for gases, increasing pressure increases solubility), and the nature of the solute and solvent (like dissolves like).
Stirring quickens the rate of solubility of solid in the liquid.