Yes it is the agricultural product of leaves, leaf buds, and internodes of the Camellia sinensis plant.
... The solute is sugar or the tea mix, the solvent is the water.
A hot tea is a solution of tea extact and sugar in water; tea extact and sugar are the solutes, water is the solvent.Vinegar is a solution of acetic acid (solute) in water (solvent).
A solute is a substance that dissovles, and a solvent is the substance that does the dissolving. For example; water is a prime example of a solvent, and any powdered drink mix (ie, gatorade, ice tea, lemonade, etc) are solutes. Solute + Solvent = a Solution.
A solute is a substance that is dissolved in a solvent to form a solution. It is typically present in a lesser amount compared to the solvent. Examples of solutes include salt in water or sugar in tea. A substance that is not a solute would be any material that does not dissolve in the solvent, such as sand in water or oil in water.
Tea is mainly water. Water is a polar solvent and will dissolve polar solutes. Sugar is polar. Therefore, hot tea will dissolve sugar due to the polarity of each substances. The second factor is the heat. Generally (but not always) increasing the temperature allows the solute to dissolve more quickly. The temperature increases the kinetic energy of the solute and the solvent. The polar solute bonds can be broken and the solute can be dispersed in the solvent more quickly if the energy of the system is higher.
... The solute is sugar or the tea mix, the solvent is the water.
Well, I believe that in referring to placing sugar in iced tea, tea is the solvent, and sugar the solute. Technically, however, the question is flawed, as tea can be a solute as well, with water as the solvent and the organic compounds released from steeping the tea leaves the solute.
Tea is a solute when it is dissolved in water to make a tea solution. The water acts as the solvent, dissolving the tea leaves to create the beverage.
solute = tea solvent = water or the other way around i forget
true
When you add sugar (solute) into the tea (solvent) it mixes together to make a solution (when a solute/sugar, mixes into a solvent/tea.)The particles in the tea will start breaking up the sugar molecules. This is called dissolving, that is when a solute will mixes and disappear into a solvent.
I am not sure of the exact make up of coffee, however in a simplistic view, coffee would be solute, water would be solvent. However, you can say more scientifically anyway that caffeine is solute. If you take sugar, sugar is also a solute.
Solute is the answer.
A hot tea is a solution of tea extact and sugar in water; tea extact and sugar are the solutes, water is the solvent.Vinegar is a solution of acetic acid (solute) in water (solvent).
The solution is what is formed when a solute is dissolved into a solvent. In this case, the solute would be sugar, and the solvent is the tea. So to answer you question, neither. Solute-substance that dissolves into a solvent Solvent-substances that dissolves a solute. **HOPE THIS HELPS :)**
Sugar or water is the Solvent in Sweet Tea. The solvent is the substance that exists in the greatest quantity of a solution, so I think it's definitely sugar or water not sure though.
Iced tea is not a strict solution; some components of the tea are dissolved in the water, whereas others are distributed as microscopic particles, in a colloidal suspension, and still larger particles are temporarily suspended but will settle out as the tea sits. So, in iced tea, some chemicals from the tea are a solute, but the rest of the tea (after filtering out the large chunks of leaves) is merely suspended in the water.