No, not exactly.
Mass mass percent concentration measures grams of solute per 100 grams of solution (= solvent + solute)
Example:
58.5 g NaCl (solute) added to
941.5 g H2O (solvent) gives you
1000.0 g solution of 5.85% NaCl (= 100%*58.5/1000.0),
which is about a 1.0 mol/L NaCl solution.
No. dilution is the addition of solvent to decrease the concentration of a solute.
1. A solvent and a solute are both parts of a solution.2. The solvent is mostly in majority and, it dissolves a solute in itself to make a solution.
The amount of saturation tells how much solute is present compared to the amount of solvent..!!
concentration= solvent times solute
concentration means there is more solute than solvent
No. dilution is the addition of solvent to decrease the concentration of a solute.
This is the concentration of the solute in the solution.
1. A solvent and a solute are both parts of a solution.2. The solvent is mostly in majority and, it dissolves a solute in itself to make a solution.
The amount of saturation tells how much solute is present compared to the amount of solvent..!!
concentration= solvent times solute
The answer is: Concentration can be expressed as grams of solute per milliliter of solvent.
It is the amount of solute dissolved from a solvent in a solution
Dilute solution: low concentration of the solute in the solvent Concentrated solution: high concentration of the solute in the solvent
percent concentration = (mass of solute/volume of solution) X 100 To solve for mass of solute, mass of solute = (percent concentration X volume of solution)/100 So, mass of solute = (10% X 100mL)/100 = 10g
concentration means there is more solute than solvent
The Concentration
These words are the two parts of dissolution. A solute is what is being dissolved, and a solvent is what dissolves it. The most universal solvent is water, which means that most solutes can be dissolved into it. A solute (e.g. sugar) is dissolved in a solvent (e.g. water) to make a solution - sugar solution