Allow the diluent to evaporate and then weigh the remaining solute crystals
36 grams per 100 ML at room temperature.
It will be saturated salt solution with salt crystals at the bottom of the container.
This salt solution is saturated at room temperature.
No
It depends on the amount of salt and the amount of water. If there is only a little salt, it is probably unsaturated. That means more salt could be dissolved into the solution. If there is quite a bit of salt, it is more than likely saturated. If you add more salt and it just floats to the bottom, it is saturated. Unless it is supersaturated of course. For the solution to be supersaturated, you would have had to boil the water, add salt to the point where it stops dissolving into the boiling hot solution, then let the solution cool down. So, it can be any of the three.
none
From your question it is impossible to tell. A salt-water solution can be unsaturated or saturated depending on how much salt was added.
It will be saturated salt solution with salt crystals at the bottom of the container.
50 grams
The concentration of the salt solution does NOT change- it is saturated.
The fastest way is to add more salt - if the additional salt falls out of solution and forms a precipitate on the bottom of the container, the solution is saturated.
This salt solution is saturated at room temperature.
first, table salt is not a saturated solution, because you can't see through it. it needs to be liquid, and solutions become a saturated solution when you put as much as you can in the water. now, it's a solution and it is saturated.
When you first mix the salt into the solution the salt will dissolve into the water. As you keep on pouring more salt into the water eventually the salt will stop dissolving and once the salt stops dissolving the solution is then saturated.
a solution which contain more solute than saturated solution
No
That solution is called saturated.
The Dead Sea is a saturated solution because it has an excessive amount of salt at its bottom.