What is solubility? How can you increase the solubility of a solid, in water?
Answers
Answer:
Usually, the solubility of a given solute in a given solvent depends on temperature. Solubility tends to equate with rising temperature for several solids dissolved in liquid water. They vibrate faster as water molecules heat up, and are better able to communicate with and split the solution apart.
(a) Solubility of a solid solute generally increases with an increase in temperature. This makes it possible to prepare supersaturated solutions. Solubility of a gas decreases with increase in temperature.
(b) Pressure has practically no effect on the solubility of a solid (solute) in water. In the case of gases, the amount of a gas dissolved in water increases with an increase in pressure.
Answer:
The maximum amount of solute that can dissolve in a known quantity of solvent at a certain temperature is its solubility.
Ways I can come up with are increasing the temperature, increased the amount of solvent, and using a solvent with similar polarity as the solute.
Explanation:
Heating a solution will increase the solubility of compounds which have endothermic dissociations.
Increasing the amount of solvent will work if the solution is saturated.