Heat the solution
A saturated solution won't dissolve any solute unless it is manipulated in some way, such as heating it, so that it will be able to accept more of a substance, and thereby become a supersaturated solution. However if it is cooled back down the solute will crystallize within the solution.
With few exceptions, if you increase the temperature of the solvent, you will increase the amount of solute that a solution will hold. So, let's say you have a saturated NaCl solution in water at room temperature. Put the beaker on a hot plate and heat it up, and it will be able to dissolve more salt. Cool it back down and it will become supersaturated (and unstable.)
The safest way to make a 3 M acid solution from a 5 M acid solution is by diluting the 5 M solution with water. To do this, you should measure out the volume of the 5 M solution needed to reach the desired concentration (3 M) and then add an appropriate amount of water to reach the final volume. Mixing acid into water can generate heat and splashes, so always add acid to water slowly while stirring to minimize potential hazards.
To make a sugar solution more concentrated, you can heat the solution to evaporate some of the water content, thus increasing the ratio of sugar to water. Another way is to keep the solution in an open container to allow water to evaporate naturally, leaving behind a more concentrated sugar solution.
The best way to neutralize an acid is to add a base to it. The base will react with the acid to form water and a salt, which will result in a neutral solution. It is important to add the base slowly to prevent any violent reactions.
Heat the solution
Use really clean equipment. Heat some water in a beaker so that it will dissolve more solute. Dissolve all that it will hold, to make sure add excess. Decant the liquid into another beaker allow no crystals to be transferred to the new beaker. Allow to cool slowly. Do not agitate. The cool solution will be supersaturated.
The solubility of sodium acetate at 20 oC is 54,6 g/100 g water. If you add further solute and this is no longer dissolved the solution is supersaturated.
In a simple way,supersaturation is when something contains more than it can hold e.g. a supersaturated solution is one in which the solvent contains more solutes that it can dissolve.
no
I think that a revolution is not a best way of solve a problem praying is the best solution.
In a saturated solution, if you add any more of the substance that the solution is saturated with, it will either not dissolve or cause some of the existing solute to precipitate or separate. The one caveat is that it is possible to achieve a "supersaturated solution" by careful manipulation of a solution to bring it into a metastable state. One common way to achieve supersaturation is to cool a saturated solution in a container which is so smooth that it lacks nucleation sites.
To make an electrolyte solution you dissolve a teaspoon of salt in a glass of water.
optimal solution is the possible solution that we able to do something and feasible solution is the solution in which we can achieve best way of the solution
A saturated solution won't dissolve any solute unless it is manipulated in some way, such as heating it, so that it will be able to accept more of a substance, and thereby become a supersaturated solution. However if it is cooled back down the solute will crystallize within the solution.
Under some circumstances it is possible to dissolve more of a solute into a solution than the nominal solubility of that solute would allow. A saturated solution is one that contains all the solute that will normally dissolve, and a supersaturated solution contains even more of that solute. If the solution is disturbed in some way (the appearance of a nucleating particle, stirring, etc.) then the excess solute will precipitate from the solution, or in the case of a gas, will bubble out of the solution.
It's not the best way of using it so no.