To dissolve something, usually you stir it or break it up into smaller pieces. This is because, with increased surface area, there is more area for the solvent to work on the substance. Further, by heating something up usually it breaks bonds, causing something to dissolve more readily.
Some things:Agitation: As in, the number of collisions within the molecules. This is why we stir when we are dissolving something.. more collision will increase rate.Temperature: The higher the temperature, the more energy the solution will have, hence more space between the molecules because they move around so much. This means more kinetic energy.Surface area: Meaning the area of contact within the solute and the solvent. More surface area = faster dissolving.
Solubility can be increased in solvent and by adding more solute.
Stirring will mix up the solvent, meaning parts of the solvent that were saturated are moved away from whatever is dissolving, and it can dissolve with other parts of the solvent that are not saturated.
if the water is hot,the solvent will dissolve faster and when it gets stirred it will dissolve even faster than when it wasn't. but if the water is cold it will dissolve slower than hot water even when stirred.
depends how many bums are fighting for it, and how hungry you are
stirring temperature size
Yes, in fact stirring does increase the rate of dissolving [or dissolution] of solids.
Both stirring and heating increase the rate of dissolving
the factors that affect sollubilty are * stirring * temperature * state of subdivision * the surface area
Stirring amps up the speed and frequency at which particls collide.. or, in other words, the kinetic energy is increased by stirring, which ultimately speeds up the dissolving process
The higher the temperature, the greater the rate of dissolving.