These nine types of solution are solid to solid solid to liquid solid to gas liquid to solid liquid to liquid liquid to gas gas to solid gas to liquid gas to gas
as soild, gaseous, liquid, and aqueous solutions
types of solutions on the basis of physical states
Liquid or solid solutions
A physical change is any sort of change in an object's physical appearance or physical state of being.Some examples of physical changes include:freezing a glass of watercutting wooddropping plates, or cupschopping fruits or vegetablestearing paperbreaking itemschewing pencilspeeling potatoes
Precipitates form whenever two insoluble ions are in solution, thereby leaving solution. They can form either gases or solids (usually solids).
Mixing ingredients to bake a cake, boiling water to make tea, and freezing water to make ice are all examples of physical processes as they involve changes in the physical state of matter without altering the chemical composition of the substances.
A physical change is a change that can be reversed easily and no new substances are made. Examples are state changes ie. solid to liquid or liquid to gas.
A physical change in MAPEH 1 refers to any alteration in the physical appearance or state of an object or substance without a change in its chemical composition. Examples include changes in shape, size, texture, or state of matter (solid, liquid, gas).
The physical state that cannot exist in a solution is solid. This can be either liquid or gaseous states but not in solid form.
A solution does not have a chemical change, but it does have a physical change in state.
solidity
Chlorine water is a pale yellow-green solution at room temperature and pressure. It exists in a liquid state.
Homogeneous and heterogeneous solutions
A physical change is any sort of change in an object's physical appearance or physical state of being.Some examples of physical changes include:freezing a glass of watercutting wooddropping plates, or cupschopping fruits or vegetablestearing paperbreaking itemschewing pencilspeeling potatoes
Melting ice into water and breaking a glass bottle are examples of physical changes. These changes do not alter the chemical composition of the substances involved, only their physical state or appearance.
Change of the state of water from a solid (ice cubes) to liquid (water).
Examples of gases: oxygen, helium, radon, nitrogen, etc.
sulfur sodium chloride sand is a homogeneous mixture (solution)
It's an aqueous solution.
The evaporation of water from a sugar solution is a physical change because only the state of the water is changing from liquid to gas, while the chemical composition of the sugar remains the same.