Dry stuff. It's not saturated with water...
Olive oil is an example of unsaturated fat, specifically monounsaturated fat. Corn oil is also an example of unsaturated fat, but it is a polyunsaturated fat. Unsaturated fats are usually liquid at room temperature and are considered healthier fats compared to saturated fats.
Palmitic acid
A classic example is ethylene: H2C=CH2.
Something is saturated when every available space is filled with liquid, and something is unsaturated when some or all of the spaces inside the contain air.
a beaker have 100 ml of water and 5 grams of salt
A saturated fat has more hydrogen atoms attached to the main fat molecule.Saturated fats tend to be solid at room temperature (example--butter)Unsaturated fats tend to be liquid at room temperature (example--olive oil)
An example of an unsaturated hydrocarbon is ethene (C2H4), which contains a double bond between two carbon atoms. This double bond leads to fewer hydrogen atoms bonded to the carbons compared to saturated hydrocarbons like ethane (C2H6).
The saturated zone is where the spaces between soil and rock particles are filled with water, while the unsaturated zone is where some of these spaces contain air as well as water. In the saturated zone, the water table is located at the top of this zone, whereas in the unsaturated zone, the water table is below the surface.
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.
Milk and Cooking oil as mustard oil and sun flower oil.
There is a benzene ring.So it is unsaturated.
Depends on the solvent. If it is unsaturated water, yes. Unsaturated methanol, no.