If you will heat the solvent, the undissolved solute will dissolve.
You can make a solute dissolve faster by mixing the solute, heating the solute, or crushing the solute.
When a solution is saturated, it means that it has reached its maximum capacity to dissolve solute at a given temperature. Any extra solute added will not dissolve and will remain as a solid at the bottom of the container.
The extra solute added to a saturated solution will not dissolve and will remain as undissolved solid at the bottom of the container. This is because the solution is already holding the maximum amount of solute that it can dissolve at that particular temperature.
Heat
You can dissolve more by heating the solution.
No, not every solvent can dissolve every solute. The ability of a solvent to dissolve a solute depends on the chemical properties of both the solvent and the solute.
No, it is the solute that dissolves in the solvent to form a solution. A solvent is a substance in which a solute can dissolve to create a homogenous mixture, known as a solution. The solute is the substance being dissolved, while the solvent is the medium in which the solute dissolves.
It depends on the polarity of the solute and the solvent. If the solute is polar, then it will only dissolve in a polar solvent If the solute in nonpolar, then it will only dissolve in a nonpolar solvent
all you have to do is add sugar into boiling water. the sugar will dissolve and make saturated sugar!!
Additional solutes may not dissolve in a saturated solution, where the solvent is already holding the maximum amount of solute. At this point, any extra solute added will remain undissolved at the bottom of the container.
The solution is likely supersaturated, meaning that it contains more solute than it can normally dissolve at that temperature.
The "solute" is the substance you are trying to dissolve. The solvent is the substance you are trying to dissolve it in.