Then the solution is said to be saturated.
When all the solute a solution can hold is dissolved, it is called a saturated solution. It contains the highest concentration possible for a solution.
This is not a saturated solution.
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 is a solute dissolved in a solvent. A concentrated solution is all the solute that be dissolved in a solvent at normal temperature. A super-concentrated solution is all the solute that can be dissolved in a solution after mixing in the solute during high temperature / pressure. The concentration after cooling to normal temperature / pressure is greater than a regular concentrated solution.
A solute dissolves in a solvent to form a solution; all the time that more of the solute can be dissolved it is unsaturated, but once the solution can hold no more of the solute it has become saturated.
Saturated solution is a solution where the maximum amount of solute has been dissolved at a given temperature, resulting in equilibrium between the dissolved solute and undissolved solute. Any additional solute added beyond this point will not dissolve and will settle at the bottom of the container.
A saturated solution contains the maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved at a given temperature. If a solution is saturated, adding more solute will not dissolve into the solution without changing the temperature.
Well, honey, if that crystal solute was dropped into a solution and dissolved, the original solution became a mixture. The crystal solute basically joined the party and got all cozy with the solvent, creating a new solution. So, in simple terms, the original solution just got a new guest to hang out with.
sugar is the solute of the solution, as we all know that when we dissolved sugar and water, sugar is the solute and the water is the solvent..
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.
A dilute solution is a solution in which there is a small amount of solute (the thing that gets dissolved) compared to the total amount of possible solute that can be dissolved in the solvent (the thing that does the dissolving). A concentrated solution is when there is a lot or all solute that can possibly fit in the solvent.
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.