Yes, (NH4)2SO4 and ALL other ammonium salts are soluble, (and all sulfates from single-positive ions are as well).
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
Polar solvents dissolve polar solutes through the formation of hydrogen bonds or dipole-dipole interactions. The partial charges on the solvent molecules interact with the charges on the solute, allowing the solute to be surrounded and dispersed within the solvent.
Because it is an intermediate polar-nonpolar solvent
Water is the solvent and chalk is the solute.
The solvent is water, the solute is carbon dioxide.
The solvent is water. The solute is carbon dioxide, plus maybe a bit of salt.
the non polar solute gets dissolved as non polar solutes tend to dissolve in non polar solvents than in polar solvents. for eg: benzene(non polar solute) gets dissolved in carbon tetrachloride which is a non polar solvent but not in water because it is a polar solvent.
Because NaCl is a polar compound (solute) dissolved in a polar solvent (water).
A polar solute is most likely to dissolve in a polar solvent. This is because like dissolves like - polar solvents have a partial positive and partial negative charge that can interact with the polar solute molecules. Examples of polar solvents include water, ethanol, and acetone.
"Salt water" is a solution because the water is the solvent and the salt is the solute. Salts dissolve readily in water because they're ionic, and therefore very polar. Water is polar as well, and tears the salt apart into its constituent ions.
Water is the solvent, and sugar is the solute.
Polar solvents dissolve polar solutes through the formation of hydrogen bonds or dipole-dipole interactions. The partial charges on the solvent molecules interact with the charges on the solute, allowing the solute to be surrounded and dispersed within the solvent.
Because it is an intermediate polar-nonpolar solvent
Water is the solvent and chalk is the solute.
In a solution of sugar and water, water is the solvent and sugar is the solute. The solvent is the substance that dissolves the solute, while the solute is the substance that is being dissolved.
something that is non-soluble in whatever solvent youre using the solvent is what is doing the dissolving, while the solute is the thing being dissolved for example: a mixture of water and salt. water is the solvent and salt is the solute. but to answer your question in more depth, the solubility of something is determined by its polarity compared to the polarity of the solvent water is polar, so polar molecules dissolve readily in water if the substance is known to be nonpolar, then it wont dissolve in water (im just assuming your solvent is water. if you want a more specific example, you should check the polarity of your solvent and solute.)
The copper sulfate is the solute and water is the solvent.