Wiki User
∙ 14y agoSome of the sugar will dissolve in the water.
An easy way to imagine this is to imagine a huge box (I'll say 10m3 as an example) full of basketballs, and another huge box (again, 10m3) full of Table Tennis balls. If you mixed the two boxes in an even bigger box, the table tennis balls would fill in the spaces between the basketballs and you'd end up with less than 20m3 of balls.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoWhen water and sugar are mixed, the sugar dissolves in the water, resulting in a solution where the sugar molecules are interspersed between the water molecules. This leads to a decrease in the overall volume of the mixture because the sugar molecules occupy some of the spaces between the water molecules, preventing the total volume from being the sum of the individual volumes.
No, sugar forms a solution when mixed with water.
Solute
In this case, water is the solvent because it is the substance present in a larger amount (50 g) and dissolves the sugar (solute) to form a solution.
No, when sugar is dissolved in water, it does not form a new substance. The sugar molecules are simply dispersed and mixed with the water molecules.
The sugar dissolves, but not as fast as if the water were warm. If there's more sugar than that amount of water can hold at that temperature, then the sugar stops dissolving at some point, even if you keep stirring.
No, sugar forms a solution when mixed with water.
Sugar water
Water with sugar mixed in.
The sugar disinigrates and is part of the water
A mixture because the sugar is mixed in the water
solvent
Sugar dissolves in water to form a homogeneous solution.
its like a sugar cube. you have sugar and water then it freezes. then the water is sweet. so therefore its a sugar cube
Solute
Solute
soluble
The sugar is a solute and the water is the solvent. Together they make a sugar solution.