Saturated
A saturated solution is one that can dissolve no more of the solute at a given temperature and pressure. This means that the maximum amount of solute has been dissolved in the solvent, and any additional solute will not dissolve and will instead form a precipitate.
A solution containing all the solute that a solvent can dissolve at a certain temperature and pressure is called a saturated solution.
A saturated solution is a solution that no more solute will dissolve. Once the solution is saturated, any more solute that is added will not dissolve.
A saturated solution contains all the solute it can hold at a given temperature. At this point, the solute is in equilibrium with the solvent, and any additional solute added will not dissolve.
You can dissolve more by heating the solution.
The point at which no more solute will dissolve in a solution is known as saturation. At saturation, the solution is considered to be in equilibrium, with the rate of dissolution equal to the rate of precipitation of the solute. Additional solute added beyond this point will not dissolve and will instead precipitate out of the solution.
When a solution is saturated, it means that it has reached its maximum capacity to dissolve solute at a given temperature. Any extra solute added will not dissolve and will remain as a solid at the bottom of the container.
An unsaturated solution
When making a solution, you dissolve a solute (usually a solid) into a solvent (usually a liquid) to form a homogeneous mixture. The solute particles disperse and become uniformly distributed in the solvent, resulting in a 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
You can dissolve more by heating the solution.
An unsaturated solution contains less solute than a saturated solution and is able to dissolve additional solute until it reaches the point of saturation.