This solution is superasaturated.
This is a concentrated or a saturated solution.
supersaturated
The number of moles of solute will not change. Too, the molarity of the solution decreases.
That would be a very dilute solution.
As you add solute to a dilute If_you_add_solute_to_a_dilute_solution_what_does_the_solution_become, the solution becomes more concentrated until the solution has reached its saturation concentration. At the saturation concentration, no more solute can dissolve into the solution.Read more: If_you_add_solute_to_a_dilute_solution_what_does_the_solution_become
This is a concentrated or a saturated solution.
supersaturated
This is a concentrated or a saturated solution.
If by "too much of a solute" you mean past the solute's solubility point, then the solute will not dissolve and instead precipitate and sink beneath the solvent. If you create a supersaturated solution, the solute will crystallize in the solvent until the remaining solute creates a saturated solution with the solvent.
The number of moles of solute will not change. Too, the molarity of the solution decreases.
A saturated solution is one where the maximum amount of solute is dissolved and no more can be dissoved at all.It will look like any other soution of that solute. If the solute is uncoloured then the solution will be so too; if the solute is coloured, then that colour will be quite (comparatively) strong.
That would be a very dilute solution.
A saturated solution contains a liquid (solvent) and a solid (solute). In a solution that dissolves, the solute dissolves in the solvent. An example of this is table salt (NaCl) in Water (H20). When you stir some salt into water, it dissolves. However, when there is too much salt in proportion to water, there are leftovers at the bottom. This indicates that the solution is saturated. Put simply, It means that there is not enough solvent to dissolve the solute. This happens because of dipole forces of the solvent attracting to ends of the solute. In a salt water solution, there needs to be about 6 water molecules to every 1 salt molecule. When there is too much of the salt, the solid falls to the bottom (precipitate). An Unsaturated solution is simply one that has not passed this critical ratio of molecules.
dilute .......................................... If you are using A+ ,, The answer is Concentrated...
As you add solute to a dilute If_you_add_solute_to_a_dilute_solution_what_does_the_solution_become, the solution becomes more concentrated until the solution has reached its saturation concentration. At the saturation concentration, no more solute can dissolve into the solution.Read more: If_you_add_solute_to_a_dilute_solution_what_does_the_solution_become
Saturation is divided into 3 groups: Saturated. Unsaturated. Supersaturated. Supersaturated is when there is too much solute in the solvent so the excess solute just falls to the bottom of the beaker/flask/cup.
A homogeneous mixture