Yes, water is an excellent solvent for a wide variety of things. The fact of it being distilled has no relevance.
Substances that are polar or ionic, such as salt, sugar, and acids, will dissolve in distilled water. Nonpolar substances, such as oil, will not dissolve in water.
Weigh 22.35 grams of KCl and Dissolve in 100 mL of Distilled Water
Water is called a solvent, because of the many things that dissolve in it.
Many things can dissolve in daily life, such as sugar in water, salt in water, coffee in hot water, and soap in water. Other examples include medication in liquid form, detergent in water for cleaning, and ink in solvents for printing.
Dissolve 74,5513 g dried KCl in 1 L distilled water, at 20 oC.
Substances that are polar or ionic, such as salt, sugar, and acids, will dissolve in distilled water. Nonpolar substances, such as oil, will not dissolve in water.
We do not understand what you mean by "freshly reared distilled water", you can not "rear" water.
the things dissolve in water because it is polar molecule.
This affirmation is not correct.
NO, water (distilled or not) is a universal solvent....that is to say given time it will dissolve anything. I would also keep it out of sunlight as it will fade the print.
If the solid substance is nonpolar, it will more likely dissolve better in an organic solvent rather than water. In this case, using distilled or tap water to prepare a solution may not make a significant difference in the solubility of the substance since it is nonpolar and not likely to dissolve well in water regardless.
most things dissolve faster in hot water.
If it is soluble in water, it will dissolve until the water is saturated. If it reacts with water, it will react. Otherwise, nothing will happen.
dissolve 10g of TCA in 100ml distilled water.
Sugar has been shown to dissolve better in distilled water than in tap water because of the pH levels. Although, sugar also dissolves in vegetable oil.
Water can.
no