If it is saturated with a solid solute, you would expect some of the solid to precipitate out - as long as the solid could find a surface to nucleate on.
If it is saturated with a gas, you would expect more gas to dissolve into it as long as it was still in contact with the saturating gas in the gas phase.
As it cools, the solution would become supersaturated and the solute would begin to precipitate out.
it become un saturated solution
Expands
A solution is obtained.
If you are lucky the fuse will blow. If not the refrigerator might catch fire.
you would need water
It loses moisture if cooled below its dew point. It becomes more dense, and that causes it to move toward areas where the air is less dense.
A cooled saturated solution of copper chloride will precipitate crystals of copper chloride.
Crystallisation
There Is No Way A Saturated Solution Can Be Cooled Quickly. But If It Did The Solution Would Desaturate.
the solute can re-form as a solid
They dissolve until the solution is saturated.
As the solution is cooled, the solubility of the solution decreases and a precipitate will form.
50 percent of the dissolved minerals will condense out of solution by crystallization.
All that would happen is the solute would not absorb into the solution and it would spill off eventually.
If the solution is saturated with salt already, then adding more salt will simply see the salt settle to the base of the solution container without it dissolving.
nothing unless you heated it and it starts to evaporate and cause the salt to stick to the side
yeh i thought it would be cool to do this ... would it be achoholic
It can happen. Then there is no solution!It can happen. Then there is no solution!It can happen. Then there is no solution!It can happen. Then there is no solution!