¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Solutes
1. solute [n] - See also: solute
Lexicographical Neighbors of Solutes
Literary usage of Solutes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Plant Anatomy from the Standpoint of the Development and Functions of the by William Chase Stevens (1916)
"Of course, however, inside a cell or water tube the water tends to sweep the
solutes along in its currents. It appears that so long as the osmotic ..."
2. Plant Anatomy from the Standpoint of the Development and Functions of the by William Chase Stevens (1907)
"And the same thing is true in the interchange of water and solutes between
different cells of the plant body, namely the water passes from the cell having ..."
3. Plant Anatomy from the Standpoint of the Development and Functions of the by William Chase Stevens (1910)
"As has been said it is not understood just how the membranes act in discriminating
between the solutes; but the size of the molecules of the latter ..."
4. An Advanced Course of Instruction in Chemical Principles by Arthur Amos Noyes, Miles Standish Sherrill (1922)
"For the mass-action and thermodynamic treatment of solutes at concentrations
larger than those at which they can be regarded as perfect solutes, ..."
5. Plant Indicators: The Relation of Plant Communities to Process and Practice by Frederic Edward Clements (1920)
"Indicators of solutes. —The term solute is used here to indicate any ...
The best-known solutes are the mineral salts found in the soil, of which some are ..."
6. A System of Physical Chemistry by William Cudmore McCullagh Lewis, James Rice (1921)
"Systems not in equilibrium — Treatment from the kinetic standpoint — Homogeneous
Systems : Diffusion of solutes in a solution — Reaction velocity — Types of ..."
7. A System of Physical Chemistry by William Cudmore McCullagh Lewis (1916)
"CHAPTER IX Systems not in Equilibrium—Treatment from the Kinetic Standpoint—
Homogeneous Systems: Diffusion of solutes in a Solution—Reaction Velocity—Types ..."