Hydrocortisone is typically mixed with a compatible diluent to maintain its stability. diluting hydrocortisone vial with more than 2 ml of water may affect its potency and stability. It is important to follow the specific instructions provided by the manufacturer or healthcare provider to ensure the effectiveness of the medication.
Any solution, acidic or basic, can be made more dilute by adding water, thereby increasing its volume without the addition of any solute.
When you dilute something, you make it weaker because you are adding more of the solvent (usually water) to decrease the concentration of the solute.
A solute is a substance that will dissolve in a solvent to form a solution. For example, in salt water, salt is the solute (as it is dissolved), water is the solvent (as it dissolves the salt), and salt water is the solution. If you add more water to the salt water so you have a lot more water than salt in the solution, you are diluting it. So basically, dilute means that you add water to a solution to make the concentration of the solute lower.
When Dilute HCL is added to water a more diluted solution of HCl is made.
The thick descending limb contains the most dilute filtrate (it is not called urine at this stage). It become more concentrated as it travels through the loop of Henle. It should be noted that this is not because more solute is added but instead because the water is reabsorbed into the blood along the loop of Henle. The Ascending Loop is the most dilute, because it is permeable to salts not H20, and passes through a Decreasing Salt Barrier. The thick portion of the ascending linb actively pumps Cl ions out of the tubular fluid and into the surrounding tissue. The ascending limb is impermeable to water, however, and so water does not follow the sodium and Cholride by osmmosis. The result is that the tublar fluid becomes more and more dilute as it flows up the ascending limb.
Add more water
Adding more water the solution become more dilute.
Water!
Water
Almost amount of water can be used. The amount you use depends on what purpose the solution will serve. Most dilutions involve using at least as much water as you have of the acid or base, often several times that amount.
Any solution, acidic or basic, can be made more dilute by adding water, thereby increasing its volume without the addition of any solute.
Adding detergent to water does not make it more dilute or concentrated. Detergent dissolves in water, so it is considered a solution. The concentration of the detergent in the water depends on the amount of detergent added.
Maple Syrup is more diluted than maple sap.
Adding more solute to a solution will increase its concentration. Adding more solvent will only dilute it. Think of salt water. The salt is the solute, and water is the solvent. Add salt and it becomes a more concentrated solution. Add more water, and it is more dilute. Simple and easy once you think it through.
Water dilutes both acids and bases by reducing their concentration. When added to an acid, water decreases the concentration of hydronium ions (H3O+) in the solution, making it less acidic. Similarly, when added to a base, water decreases the concentration of hydroxide ions (OH-) in the solution, making it less basic.
To make a solution of hydrochloric acid more dilute, you can add more water to the solution. This will decrease the concentration of hydrochloric acid in the solution while maintaining the total volume. Gradually adding water and mixing well will help in achieving the desired dilution.
To dilute a solution, add more solvent (such as water) to decrease the concentration of the solute. To concentrate a solution, remove some of the solvent (through evaporation or other methods) to increase the concentration of the solute.