This depends on the nature of this solid, temperature, pressure, stirring, particles dimension etc.
Coal does not dissolve in water, whether warm or cold. It is a solid material primarily composed of carbon, along with various minerals and other organic compounds. While it can release some substances when submerged in water, it does not dissolve like a soluble substance would.
If the bottle has a capacity of 100 cm3, you would expect to be able to fill it with 100 cm3 of water.
Yes, a saturated solution of water and potassium chloride means that the solution contains the maximum amount of potassium chloride that can dissolve in water at a given temperature. Additional potassium chloride added to the solution would not dissolve and would remain as solid at the bottom of the container.
the answer to this one is, you cant dissolve a solid..like wood well you could with some chemicals that would eat away at the solid but if you mean putting it in some water and heat it up then no you can not.
yes sugar is matter any thing is matter if its a solid liquid or gas and sugar would be solid particles
Approximately 30.4 grams of potassium chloride would dissolve in 100 cm3 of water at room temperature.
Water would be the solvent and the solid would be the solute.
Depends on the solid. Cotton candy would dissolve a lot faster than the same weight of caramelized sugar, due to a lot more surface area.
Arsenic is a solid metalloid that is not soluble in water. It can react with certain acids or salts to form soluble compounds, but arsenic itself does not dissolve like a typical substance would in water.
Coal does not dissolve in water, whether warm or cold. It is a solid material primarily composed of carbon, along with various minerals and other organic compounds. While it can release some substances when submerged in water, it does not dissolve like a soluble substance would.
If the bottle has a capacity of 100 cm3, you would expect to be able to fill it with 100 cm3 of water.
Yes, a saturated solution of water and potassium chloride means that the solution contains the maximum amount of potassium chloride that can dissolve in water at a given temperature. Additional potassium chloride added to the solution would not dissolve and would remain as solid at the bottom of the container.
the answer to this one is, you cant dissolve a solid..like wood well you could with some chemicals that would eat away at the solid but if you mean putting it in some water and heat it up then no you can not.
yes sugar is matter any thing is matter if its a solid liquid or gas and sugar would be solid particles
A non polar compound would be least likely to dissolve in water.
BaSO4 is insoluble in water while NH4CO3 is soluble, so you can separate them by adding water to the mixture to dissolve NH4CO3 and leave behind BaSO4. The BaSO4 can then be filtered out from the solution containing NH4CO3.
Well, I would like to know where I could get a free pair of solid gold pants, but I'm not bothering YOU about it. Lesson Learned. ~Swag Sister