Depends on the solvent. If it is unsaturated water, yes. Unsaturated methanol, no.
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.
The crystal of salt will dissolve in the unsaturated solution until equilibrium is reached, where the rate of dissolution equals the rate of crystal formation. The concentration of the salt in the solution will increase until it reaches saturation point.
You can determine if the solution is saturated by adding a small amount of salt to the solution. If the salt dissolves, the solution is unsaturated. If the added salt does not dissolve and collects at the bottom of the container, the solution is saturated.
An unsaturated solution
Such solution which can dissolve more solute at a given temperature is called as unsaturated solution. A solution that can still dissolve more solute
The sodium acetate crystal would dissolve in the unsaturated salt solution as it has higher solubility. This would increase the concentration of sodium ions and acetate ions in the solution, potentially precipitating out salt crystals if the solution becomes saturated.
An unsaturated solution has excess solvent and can still dissolve more solute.A saturated solution cannot dissolve any more solute, it will simply stay separate.
There's many unsaturated solutions, and example can be iced tea. It all depends of how much the liquid can handle. If you add the iced tea powder in water and some sugar is kept at the bottom that means it is saturaded, if you put less amount of the iced tea and keep stirring and adding more until its got enough and nothing is standing at the bottom then you'll know its unsaturated.
It will dissolve in the solution.
For a solution to be unsaturated, it means that more solute can be dissolved in the solvent; the saturation point has not been reached. This unsaturated aqueous sodium chloride is just a solution of common salt that can still have more NaCl dissolved in it.
Yes
"unsaturated"