Yes temperature affects the amount of substance dissolved in a saturated solution.
When you add items that can be dissolved, and it doesn't dissolve in the liquid, it means that it is saturated.
A saturated solution.
The solution is said to be unsaturated. If the max amount is dissolved at a given temperature, then the solution is saturated.
The maximum amount of solute is dissolved in it-apex
A saturated solution is made when you have added so much solute that no more dissolves. The amount of solute needed to make a saturated solution will change with the temperature of the solution.
a saturated solution is a one in which no more solute can be dissolved at that temperature.
a saturated solution is a one in which no more solute can be dissolved at that temperature.
This is a saturated solution.
Increasing the temperature more solute is dissolved.
A saturated solution has a solute that is at its maximum concentration. At this point, no more solute can be dissolved at the current temperature. The dissolved and undissolved solutes are at equilibrium in the saturated solution.
Solutions can either be unsaturated, saturated, or supersaturated. In the case of your question, a solution with the maximum amount of dissolved solute is deemed to be saturated.
When you add items that can be dissolved, and it doesn't dissolve in the liquid, it means that it is saturated.
This is called a concentrated solution, not especially a saturated solution.('saturated' means: maximal possibleconcentration, this is not always a large amount!)
If a solution is saturated, all of the substance is dissolved in the liquid. If a solution is unsaturated, there is still some solute (the solid) that has not been dissolved. Finally, if a solution is supersaturated, the solution has more solute dissolved than usual (usually results from a temperature increase), the word homogeneous best describes the true solution.
That solution is called saturated.
If it is solid at room temperature but melts when heated.
saturated solution