This solution is a liquid.
Don't really know.....you should ask someone
a solute and solvent are added together to form a solution. the solvent is the liquid and the solute is the substance that is dissolved by the solvent and together, they form a solution! yay!!
Increasing the temperature the solubility increase.
The state of a solution typically depends on the solvent used, the solute concentration, temperature, and pressure. These factors determine whether the solution is a solid, liquid, or gas at a given set of conditions.
1_A solvent is either a liquid or gas that takes into itself a solute (which can be in the state of a solid, liquid or gas) and creates a solution.If we use a simple and easy example, we can get a handle on the idea. Take a glass of warm water, put a teaspoon of table salt in it, and stir it. The salt will dissolve in the water and "disappear" from view. The water is the solvent here, the salt is the solute in this example, and the resulting salt water is a solution that we created. It's that simple.Wikipedia has more information, and a link is provided to their post on solvent.A solvent is also the substance that dissolves the solute.2_The solvent is the substance that the solute or solutes dissolve (disappear in solvent) in and it forms the bulk of the solution . In a suger solution, sugar is the solute and water is the solvent .
If material is in liquid state the solvent is the liquid portion, the solute is the material being dessolved.
If material is in liquid state the solvent is the liquid portion, the solute is the material being dessolved.
solute can be solid, liquid or gas.One should remember that state of solution is determined by state of solvent.Ex- in a mixture of 1 mole Hg and 1 mole metal the solute is Hg and solvent is metal as solution which is an alloy is solid.
No, as we know a solution is a mixture of a solute and a solvent. They can be in the state of a fluid only: liquid and gas.
If material is in liquid state the solvent is the liquid portion, the solute is the material being dessolved.
When a solid is dissolved in a liquid, the liquid is said to be the solvent and the solid is to be the solute. The liquid that you get after dissolving the solid into the liquid is called the solution. When a solute dissolves, the solvent particles attract the particles of the solute away which breaks the cluster of particles apart. After dissolving enough amount that the solvent cannot dissolve more, the solution is said to be saturated. It is the state when the solution cannot dissolve anymore solute. The opposite of solution is suspension. A suspension is when the solute cannot be dissolved (that is, it is insoluble) into the solvent and stays suspended in the solvent. A suspension is translucent and the suspended particles can be easily seen. While, in a solution, the particles are soluble and complete dissolve into the solvent. A solution is transparent and the particles are too small to be seen through naked eyes.
Don't really know.....you should ask someone
A solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute in a solution, forming the larger portion of the solution. The solute is the substance that is dissolved in a solvent to form a solution, making up the smaller portion of the solution. In summary, the solvent dissolves the solute to create a solution.
No. Water is not solution but it is a compound. A solution a substance in which another substance is dissolved. Or an intimate mixture of two substances. Generally considered to be in the liquid state, but not necessarily so.
When a solid solute dissolves in a liquid solvent, the composition of the solid remains unchanged, as only the physical state changes. The individual particles of the solid separate and disperse uniformly throughout the liquid, forming a homogeneous solution.
a solute and solvent are added together to form a solution. the solvent is the liquid and the solute is the substance that is dissolved by the solvent and together, they form a solution! yay!!
Some solute-solvent combinations are: example (solute state-solvent state) oxygen in nitrogen (gas-gas) carbon dioxide in water (gas-liquid) water vapor in air (liquid-gas) alcohol in water (liquid-liquid) mercury in silver and tin, dental amalgam (liquid-solid) sugar in water (solid-liquid) copper in nickel (MonelTM alloy) (solid-solid)