Saturated
A saturated solution.
When the maximum amount of solid (solute) is dissolved in a solvent, the resulting solution is said to be saturated.
A solution is a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances, where one substance (solute) is dissolved in another substance (solvent). When a liquid is fully saturated with dissolved solid, it means that no more solute can dissolve in the solution at that temperature, and the solution is said to be saturated.
A solution that contains the maximum amount of dissolved solid that it can hold is called a saturated solution. This means that no more solid can dissolve in the solution without additional factors like temperature changes.
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).
No, a solution is a homogeneous mixture composed of two or more substances. The solute is the substance that is dissolved in the solvent. The solute can be a solid, liquid, or gas, and the solvent is typically a liquid, but can also be a gas or solid.
1. gaseous solution- includes gases or vapors dissolved in one another.two or more gases can form a solution. Air is an example of a gaseous solution. When dry is made up of oxygen gas dissolved in nitrogen gas.2. liquid solution-contain a liquid solvent in which gas, liquid, or solid is dissolved. Water is the most common liquid solution. Many things can be dissolved in it. Table salt is an example of a solid dissolved in a liquid. A liquid and a gas can also be dissolved in a liquid solution.3. A solid solution-is a mixture of solids spread equally throughout one another. Metal is an example of a solid solution at room temperature.different kinds of solution
When sugar is dissolved in water and no more can dissolve, the solution is referred to as a saturated solution. In this state, the maximum amount of sugar has been dissolved at a given temperature, and any additional sugar will remain undissolved at the bottom of the container.
A solution that contains more dissolved material than its solubility can hold is called a supersaturated solution. It is temporarily stable but can become unstable and result in the excess solute precipitating out of the solution.
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.
When a solid such as table salt is placed in a liquid that dissolves it (a solvent) such as water, it dissolves and passes into solution. When it is all dissolved there is no solid left, only the liquid salt solution. It is still solid while it is dissolving as the dissolution action can only take place at the surface of the solid. Removal of salt ions (sodium and chlorine atoms) from the solid exposes more solid underneath until all the solid is dissolved.
If it is solid at room temperature but melts when heated.