Keep in mind that the solvent solvates the solute. The substance that is present in the larger quantity will be the solvent; the lesser quantity will be the solute.
Solvent can be oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen and argon and co2 and other noble gases. Solute can be dust particles, pollen, sulfur dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide. Usually solvent is abundant than solute in any solution.
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The addition of solute to a solvent concentrates the overall solution. A nice example is the laundry detergent. Some (less) concentrated detergents are less viscous, while highly concentrated detergents are more viscous (greater density). Also, adding more solute to a solvent can lower the freezing point.
A solute is something that dissolves into a solvent. The solvent is the substance present in the greatest amount (there is always more of it) and the solute is always present in a smaller amount. Together they form a solution.
Not necessarily just changing the surface area causes the rate to change. Changing the ratio of surface area volume changes the rate at which a solute dissolves in a solvent. If the surface area is larger and the volume of a solute is smaller or the same, then the rate at which the solute dissolves in a solvent increases. If the surface area is smaller and the volume of the solute is larger or the same, then the rate at which the solute dissolves in a solvent decreases.
Solvent: Most Abundant (Milk) Solute: Least Abundant (Chocolate Syrup)
in any solution the substanse with the greatest quanity is the
As more solute dissolves in a solvent, the solubility of the solute in the solvent increases. This leads to an increase in the concentration of the solution. The solution becomes more concentrated as more solute particles are dispersed in the solvent.
In a liquid solution, the solute is the substance that is dissolved, and the solvent is the substance that does the dissolving. In a gas solution, the solute is the gas that is being dissolved, and the solvent is the gas that does the dissolving.
Solution: a solute (or more) in a solvent. Solute: the dissolved substance in a solvent. The solute must be soluble in the solvent.
Sugar is the solute.
A solute is a substance that is dissolved in a solvent to form a solution. The solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while the solution is the homogeneous mixture formed by the solvent and solute.
solute is the one which is dissolved from a solvent. A solute is a homologous mixture, made of two or more substances. Mixtures have a solute that is dissolved into another substance called the solvent. The solute is not as concentrated in the mixture in most cases as the solvent.
A solution consists of one or more solutes dissolved in a solvent. The solute is the substance that dissolves and the solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute. Take salt water as an example. The salt is the solute and the water is the solvent.
A dilute solution has a low concentration of solute dissolved in a solvent, whereas a concentrated solution has a high concentration of solute dissolved in a solvent. Dilute solutions have more solvent relative to the amount of solute, while concentrated solutions have more solute relative to the amount of solvent.
Solvent can be oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen and argon and co2 and other noble gases. Solute can be dust particles, pollen, sulfur dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide. Usually solvent is abundant than solute in any solution.
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).