air
The solvent is evaporated and after this condensed.
When you heat a liquid and it changes phase it becomes a solid.
Actually, a liquid becomes a solid when it loses heat, not when it gains heat. When heat is removed, the molecules slow down and eventually arrange themselves into a solid crystalline structure.
It could do either.
When liquid becomes a solid it has to loose temperature. Because when a substance transforms into solid from liquid the atoms of that substance has to come closer to form the solid form.
it becomes a heat out
Heat the solid until it becomes a liquid or a gas.
The solute becomes less ordered. (apex)
When this happens,the liquid loses all its heat & becomes solid.
The solvent is evaporated and after this condensed.
A solute is the solid which dissolves in the liquid. And the solvent is the liquid. Ex: For tea, the water is the solvent and the caffeine is the solute. Therefore, when the solute and solvent are put together it becomes a solution.
A solute is the solid which dissolves in the liquid. And the solvent is the liquid. Ex: For tea, the water is the solvent and the caffeine is the solute. Therefore, when the solute and solvent are put together it becomes a solution.
A solute is the solid which dissolves in the liquid. And the solvent is the liquid. Ex: For tea, the water is the solvent and the caffeine is the solute. Therefore, when the solute and solvent are put together it becomes a solution.
latent heat of fusion.
There are three ways in which the dissolving of a solid in a solution can be increased. 1) Use a powered form of the solid, this increases the surface area that is exposed to the solvent. 2) Heat the mixture up. 3) Agitate the mixture (stir it).
When you heat a liquid and it changes phase it becomes a solid.
Freezing, I think.