Want this question answered?
When some of the material being dissolved remains it's called a saturated solution
A Saturated Solution. In an unsaturated solution, more will dissolve, but once the solution is saturated, it is "full" and will not allow any material to dissolve in it at current temperature and other conditions.
The solvent can hold more solute when it is heated. Because on heating the solubility of a solvent increases.
AnswerYes - just as a dilute solution of certain compound can be saturatedAnswerYes; by using some 'inverse' or "lateral" thinking.Heat the solution with a setup such that you provide a catchment for the water that is evaporated by the heat.Once you have a 'reasonable' amount of this water in a/the separate container, you then simply tip an amount of the original concentrated solution into the 'new' water catchment.The result will be a solution that is now not saturated - exactly according to how much concentrated solution you have put into the new container.
A unsaturated solution is a solution with the concentration of solute under the maximal solubility at a given temperature.
When some of the material being dissolved remains it's called a saturated solution
A Saturated Solution. In an unsaturated solution, more will dissolve, but once the solution is saturated, it is "full" and will not allow any material to dissolve in it at current temperature and other conditions.
A graph can illustrate what solution is saturated and unsaturated. If the point is on the line, then the solution is saturated, while if is below the line, the solution is unsaturated.
If more solute is added to the solution and the solute remains undissolved, then you know that solution is saturated.
The solvent can hold more solute when it is heated. Because on heating the solubility of a solvent increases.
Equilibrium is only found in a saturated solution, where the dissolved species and the undissolved species are in equilibrium with each other. In a dilute solution there is nothing that is undissolved, and so there is no equilibrium, and by definition a supersaturated solution is out of equilibrium and essentially has too much stuff dissolved in it (it will eventually return to equilibrium and some of the dissolved material will precipitate out).
AnswerYes - just as a dilute solution of certain compound can be saturatedAnswerYes; by using some 'inverse' or "lateral" thinking.Heat the solution with a setup such that you provide a catchment for the water that is evaporated by the heat.Once you have a 'reasonable' amount of this water in a/the separate container, you then simply tip an amount of the original concentrated solution into the 'new' water catchment.The result will be a solution that is now not saturated - exactly according to how much concentrated solution you have put into the new container.
A unsaturated solution is a solution with the concentration of solute under the maximal solubility at a given temperature.
unsaturated.
It means you could dissolve even more material than is already dissoved.
A saturated solution.
Saturated solution is a solution that did dissolve to the maximum capacity. Unsaturated solution is a solution that didn't dissolve to the maximum capacity.