The amount of a substance that can be dissolved in a liquid at a given pressure and temperature
represents the maximum amount of solid that can be dissolved in a liquid at a specified temperature represents the maximum amount of solid that can be dissolved in a liquid at a specified temperature
The amount of mass of a compound that will dissolve in a unit volume of solution Aqueous Solubility is the maximum concentration of a chemical that will dissolve in pure water at a reference temperature
The quality, condition, or degree of being soluble or solvable; as, the solubility of a salt; the solubility of a problem or intricate difficulty
The maximum amount of a species that can be dissolved in a given solvent It is usually expressed as the maximum achievable concentration A solution is called "saturated" if it contains the maximum dissolvable amount
A measure of how well an additive dissolves in molten aluminium (can also be applied to solid solutions)
the amount of a substance that can be dissolved in a liquid under specified conditions
The degree to which a solid, vapor, or other immiscible liquid dissolves in a liquid
The ability of a chemical (e g , pollutant) to be dissolved into a solvent (e g , water column)
The extent to which one substance will result in another For example, we might say that salt is very soluble in water, but that oil is not soluble in water
Degree to which a substance dissolves in a solvent to make a solution (usually expressed as grams of solute per litre of solvent). Solubility of one fluid (liquid or gas) in another may be complete (totally miscible; e.g., methanol and water) or partial (oil and water dissolve only slightly). In general, "like dissolves like" (e.g., aromatic hydrocarbons dissolve in each other but not in water). Some separation methods (absorption, extraction) rely on differences in solubility, expressed as the distribution coefficient (ratio of a material's solubilities in two solvents). Generally, solubilities of solids in liquids increase with temperature and those of gases decrease with temperature and increase with pressure. A solution in which no more solute can be dissolved at a given temperature and pressure is said to be saturated (see saturation). See also Joel Hildebrand
{i} state or quality of being soluble, capability of being melted or dissolved; amount of a substance that can be dissolved in a solvent
The ratio of the maximum amount of solute to the volume of solvent in which this solute can dissolve Often expressed in units of grams of solute per 100g of water, or in moles of solid per liter of solution
The amount of a substance that will dissolve in a specified quantity of another substance, at a specified temperature
An upper limit on a chemical's dissolved concentration in water at a specified temperature Aqueous concentrations in excess of solubility may indicate sorption onto sediments, the presence of solubilizing chemicals such as solvents, or the presence of a non-aqueous phase liquid (such as free floating fuel)
The name given to a solid that will dissolve Some solids that will not dissolve in water may dissolve in other liquids Biro ink will not dissolve in water but it will in another liquid called propanone
Susceptible of being solved; as, a soluble algebraic problem; susceptible of being disentangled, unraveled, or explained; as, the mystery is perhaps soluble
(of a substance) capable of being dissolved in some solvent (usually water) susceptible of solution or of being solved or explained; "the puzzle is soluble
The maximum concentration of a chemical compound which can result when it is dissolved in water If a substance is water soluble, it can very readily disperse through the environment
The maximum possible concentration of a chemical compound dissolved in water If a substance is water soluble it can very readily disperse through the environment