In solution, the sugar is no longer in a state of solidity or fluidity. once dissolved, it is divided into charged particles or smaller mollecules, which are attracted to either the positive or negative poles of the water molecules. The sugar molecules are therefore aqueous, not solid, liquid or gas.
no solutions always do not contain liquid solute. eg: in a solution of salt and water water is the solvent and salt is the solvent.... also in lemonade sugar salt or anything r not liquid
a simple example would be sugar
a solid dissolves into a liquid because of the free inter molecular spaces in between the molecules of the liquid or the solvent......... for example if we dissolve sugar in water and stirr the water , the sugar dissapears . this happens because the molecules of water are not yery closely placed and the sugarparticles go and fit inside the molecular spaces.......
Hi, Well the actual liquid formed will be entirely dependant on the solid used, but generic terms would be a solution if the solid completey dissolves and the properties of the liquid are identical throughout (think of sugar dissolved in tea or coffee), however, if the solid is not fully dissolved but is mixed in with the liquid, this will be called a suspension (think of alka seltzer or similar, where it discolours the water but there are particles of the solid detectable). Thanks
a solid has high intermolecular force of attraction, so if the thermal energy is supplied to the solid, the randomness of the molecules increases and it thus decreases the force of attraction and hence converts into a liquid.
Tea, Crude oil, salt in water, sugar in water, etc
Solid, Because its particles are joint together thats why its sweet solid
A solution is a homogeneous mixture of two substances (solid-solid, solid-gas, solid-liquid, liquid-liquid, liquid-gas, gas-gas) ex: alloys are mixtures of two or more metals or they can be called as metal-metal solutions. Other very common examples of solutions in daily life are salt solution, sugar solution etc.....
No sugar cane is not a liquid. It is a solid and is grown as a plant.
May be solid or as a cream (emulsion).
Icing sugar is a solid.
It cools
the solvent is the water; while the solute is the sugar
It's a solid.
Well now, that would depend on what kind of matter you're talking about, wouldn't it. At room temperature (and room pressure) . . . -- Oxygen, nitrogen, and helium are in the gas phase. -- Water, mercury, and grain alcohol are in the liquid phase. -- Iron, sugar, and candle wax are in the solid phase.
Gas liquid
yes