I think it means that it dissolves when in water long enough.
Something that is soluble can dissolve in a liquid (like sugar in water), but something that insoluble cannot (like rocks in water).
Something that is soluble can be dissolved in a particular solvent to form a homogenous mixture. Substances like sugar and salt are examples of solutes that are soluble in water.
I think it's called soluble. It is; I'll just add 'dissolution'.
A substance that can be dissolved is called a solute.
A substance is considered more soluble in water if it dissolves easily and forms a homogeneous mixture with water. Factors like polarity, molecular size, and temperature can influence solubility in water. Generally, substances that are polar or ionic tend to be more soluble in water compared to nonpolar substances.
no some materials are soluble but not gels. Like salt which is soluble
Something that can dissolve. A substance that is water-soluble can be dissolved in water.
Something that is soluble can dissolve in a liquid (like sugar in water), but something that insoluble cannot (like rocks in water).
Water is a substance. If you put it together with something soluble, it becomes a solution. With something non-soluble, it becomes a mixture.
The antonym of soluble is insoluble. Something that is insoluble does not dissolve in a particular solvent.
water soluble
Something that is soluble can be dissolved in a particular solvent to form a homogenous mixture. Substances like sugar and salt are examples of solutes that are soluble in water.
I think it's called soluble. It is; I'll just add 'dissolution'.
Something that can be dissolved in water is said to be soluble.
A substance that can be dissolved is called a solute.
Soluble means something will dissolve. Sand does not dissolve in water, salt does.
Lipids are soluble in non polar solvents