Gasses dissolve in water because they bond to the water molecules. Gasses like hydrogen will bond with the oxygen in water to create H202 for example.
A gas can dissolve in water for the same reason that any other phase of substance can dissolve in water. The water molecule is polar, and therefore can exert an electromagnetic attraction on other molecules.
Gasses dissolve in water because they bond to the water molecules. Gasses like hydrogen will bond with the oxygen in water to create H202 for example.
Yes. One common example is carbonated water which is water with carbon dioxide dissolved in it.
Gases dissolve in liquids
They dissolve faster in hot water.
Some things that dissolve in water are sugar, soda, food coloring, chocolate syrup, and food particles. Other things that dissolve is salt, vinegar, coffee powder, and copper sulfate.
Depends entirely on the glue. some harden in water, some soften or even dissolve.-Name your glue -
No......it will float above the water. You have to add some hot water or stir it to mix it but it will clump and after sitting will dissipate out again. e.g. It will never completely dissolve or mix.
no
Generally, polar solutes such as sugar and salt dissolve better in cold water compared to non-polar solutes like oil. However, the solubility of a solute can vary based on its molecular structure and the specific conditions of the solution.
yes example-oxygen
There are three ways. Some mixtures are gases themselves, and air is the most common one. Some mixtures are partly gases and partly liquids. Also, gases can dissolve into liquids, like oxygen in water.
Incondensible gases, are gases that do not condense and do not dissolve readily in hot water. Steam ejectors are used to remove these gases from a condenser.
Air can hold a certain amount of water vapour. The amount it can hold depends on the air temperature - the hotter it is, the more water it can hold. A way to think of it is that water Can dissolve in air, just like some gases and solids can dissolve in water.
oxygen
Sodium chloride is very soluble in water. Gases are generally low soluble in water.
I suppose that the dissolution is faster in fresh water but the differences are minimal.
Water is a solvent, because some solids will dissolve in it.
Oxygen oxidizes. CO2 needs water ... making carbonic acid, which will dissolve some rocks. Sulfa also needs water to eventually form sulfuric acid, which will dissolve just about anything.
Oxygen oxidizes. CO2 needs water ... making carbonic acid, which will dissolve some rocks. Sulfa also needs water to eventually form sulfuric acid, which will dissolve just about anything.
No. Ionic bonds dissolve in water the best.