Not really, since you can always increase the pressure and dissolve more. You do reach limits when the liquid ceases to be recognized as a liquid, or the gas itself becomes a liquid
As the temperature of a liquid decreases the amount of gas that can be dissolved increases.
Increasing pressure.
This is a gas dissolved in a liquid.
This is a gas dissolved in a liquid.
This is a gas dissolved in a liquid.
A gas dissolved in liquid. Which means it is no longer a gas. :)
it is a dissolved gas
I'm not 100% sure that "solubility" is the right word to use here, but the amount of dissolved gas in a liquid will decrease as the partial pressure of the gas above the liquid decreases.Basically The solubility decreases.
A liquid with bubbles. :)
More gas dissolves into the liquid.
Saturated solution is the ideal type of solution. The other is unsaturated, which is less saturated than what the solvent (water, liquid etc.), and it can dilute. The last one is supersaturated which mean the solution contains more solute (solid materials).
Henry's law states that the solubility of a gas is directly proportional to the partial pressure of that gas over the liquid. The higher the partial pressure, the more gas will be dissolved-- that's why your blood boils in a vacuum; there's not enough pressure to keep the gas in it dissolved.