Answer:
The amount of sugar that can dissolve in water increase .
Step-by-step explanation:
- Energy, which is the capacity to do work or produce heat, affects the rate at which a solute will dissolve.
- Breaking up, crushing or grinding a sugar cube before adding it to water increases the sugar's surface area.
- The more surface area a solute has, the faster it will dissolve because more particles of the sugar can interact with the water.
- This means the finer the sugar particles, the faster it will dissolve.
- The sugar in the middle of a sugar cube is protected from the water by the sugar in the outer layers of the cube; the water has to go through those outer layers first.
- But if you crush the cube into a powder, all of the sugar is exposed to the water at once.