Unsaturated, the sugar will dissolve and you won't see any sugar solutes
saturated, when the solution has all the solutes that it can take and dissovled
super saturated, there is too much sugar and you can see the sugar solutes
The unsaturated solution has a concentration lower than 2 100 g/L at 25 oC.
The supersaturated solution has a concentration higher than 2 100 g/L at 25 oC.
Supersaturated
Acids add protons or H+ (they're the same thing) to water solutions. That's the definition of an acid.
sodium acetate and sodium hydroxide will produce basic solution.
Starch is composed of amylose and amylopectin, and is not soluble in water due to the presence of amylopectinIodine (I₂) is somewhat soluble in water, but is more soluble in iodide (I⁻) solutions, such as potassium iodide solution (KI).Aqueous iodine molecules (I₂) and iodide ions (I⁻) together will form triiodide ions (I₃⁻), which can react with amylose found in starch to produce a deep-blue colour in the solution. So all of iodide (I⁻), iodine (I₂) and amylose (or starch) are required together to produce the colour.This can be used to test for:Amylose/Starch: Add iodine dissolved in potassium iodide solution to test solution, orIodine: Add starch and potassium iodide solutions to test solution.If the substance being tested for is present, then triiodide ions (I₃⁻) can react with amylose (in starch) to produce a deep-blue colour, that is, a positive result.
Ferrous
supersaturated
Supersaturated
When iodine solution is mixed with starch solution they produce blue-black color.
Yes, manganese has ions in solutions.
There are many different types of chemical solutions which need specific bases to produce their end yield. You have to be specific about which grouping solution are you talking about in particular.
Acids add protons or H+ (they're the same thing) to water solutions. That's the definition of an acid.
Greedy algorithms are only guaranteed to produce locally optimal solutions within a given time frame; they cannot be guaranteed to find globally optimal solutions. However, since the intent is to find a solution that approximates the global solution within a reasonable time frame, in that sense they will always work. If the intent is to find the optimal solution, they will mostly fail.
It would make a good experiment. Anybody from Utah? Heating saltwater followed by gradual cooling of it can produce a supersaturated solution, and I'm guessing that an egg will will float on highly concentrated salt water even at low temperatures.
sodium acetate and sodium hydroxide will produce basic solution.
Acids in aqueous solution are almost always electrolytes that produce hydrogen cations in the solution. Hydrogen cations have the highest specific conductance of any ions in aqueous solution, so that acidic solutions are very strongly conductive if concentrated.
On excessive cooling may produce colloidal particles from true solution or a reaction with another substance may produce such solution.
just acidic solutions