Any gas phase that does not contain a separate liquid or solid phase but does contain at least two distinct chemical substances is an example of a "gas dissolved in a gas"* Clean dry air is the most common example.
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*It is unusual to describe gases as "dissolved" in each other; they are more often described simply as "mixed with" each other.
The types of solutions in the final phase include a single, multiple, or no solution. A single solution indicates that there is one unique answer, while multiple solutions imply that there are multiple valid answers. No solution means that there is no answer that satisfies the equation or problem.
The three types of solutions are unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated. Unsaturated solutions can dissolve more solute, while saturated solutions have reached the maximum solute concentration. Supersaturated solutions have more solute than would normally dissolve at that temperature.
You can separate dissolved solids from a liquid through techniques such as evaporation, filtration, distillation, or crystallization. These methods work by physically removing the solid particles from the liquid, leaving behind a purified liquid.
One example of a liquid in liquid solution is vinegar (acetic acid) dissolved in water. When vinegar is mixed with water, the acetic acid molecules disperse and interact with the water molecules, forming a homogeneous liquid solution.
No a solution is a liquid that has another substance dissolved in it.Added:When a solute ('the other substance') is dissolved in a solvent (liquid), this will result in a solution.
1. gaseous solution- includes gases or vapors dissolved in one another.two or more gases can form a solution. Air is an example of a gaseous solution. When dry is made up of oxygen gas dissolved in nitrogen gas.2. liquid solution-contain a liquid solvent in which gas, liquid, or solid is dissolved. Water is the most common liquid solution. Many things can be dissolved in it. Table salt is an example of a solid dissolved in a liquid. A liquid and a gas can also be dissolved in a liquid solution.3. A solid solution-is a mixture of solids spread equally throughout one another. Metal is an example of a solid solution at room temperature.different kinds of solution
One example of a solution is mixing baking soda with water to create a paste that can be used to clean and deodorize surfaces in the kitchen or bathroom.
No. Metal mixtures, called alloys, are also solutions. For example, sterling silver is an alloy of silver and copper. Also, solutions can contain dissolved gases in liquid and also more than one liquid.
Saturated solution is the ideal type of solution. The other is unsaturated, which is less saturated than what the solvent (water, liquid etc.), and it can dilute. The last one is supersaturated which mean the solution contains more solute (solid materials).
A solution of one liquid in another liquid is a homogeneous mixture where the first liquid (solute) is completely dissolved in the second liquid (solvent). The resulting solution has the same phase as the solvent and exhibits uniform composition throughout. Examples include salt dissolved in water or ethanol mixed with water.
The types of solutions in the final phase include a single, multiple, or no solution. A single solution indicates that there is one unique answer, while multiple solutions imply that there are multiple valid answers. No solution means that there is no answer that satisfies the equation or problem.
The three types of solutions are unsaturated, saturated, and supersaturated. Unsaturated solutions can dissolve more solute, while saturated solutions have reached the maximum solute concentration. Supersaturated solutions have more solute than would normally dissolve at that temperature.
You can separate dissolved solids from a liquid through techniques such as evaporation, filtration, distillation, or crystallization. These methods work by physically removing the solid particles from the liquid, leaving behind a purified liquid.
A solution is a compound that dissolved from another compound.
a liquid solid in a solid is example of an important collodial system called solid emulsion or gel. butter is one where liquid is water and solid is fat, oher eg: flesh
A solid dissolved into a liquid makes a solution, as opposed to a suspension which is when the solid remains visibly suspended in the liquid without rising to the top or sinking to the bottom.The previous answer which I am replacing mistook the question as "What is made when a solid turns into a liquid, i.e.: melts, like ice to water". That would be a single substance in two states of matter, solid and liquid, not one solid substance dissolved into a different liquid substance, for example salt dissolving into water.
You may be referring to when one liquid is dissolved into another. Alcohol has a great power to dissolve water for example. This is how alcohol sterilizes a surface - it dehydrates any small bacteria etc. This same process is sometimes used to rapidly dry photographic negatives, when time is important. Perhaps for a news photographer.