Yes.
when a solvent can hold no more solute it is called saturated
The solvent can hold more solute when it is heated. Because on heating the solubility of a solvent increases.
That is called the saturation point, where the solvent has dissolved the maximum amount of solute it can hold at a particular temperature. Any additional solute added beyond this point will not dissolve and will remain as solid particles in the solution.
When a mixture is saturated, it means that it has reached its maximum capacity to dissolve a solute at a particular temperature. Any additional solute added will not be able to dissolve further in the mixture.
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.
when a solvent can hold no more solute it is called saturated
It is a supersaturated solution.
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.
No. A supersaturated solution holds more solute than the solvent could normally hold.
The solvent can hold more solute when it is heated. Because on heating the solubility of a solvent increases.
In a saturated solution, the solvent has dissolved the maximum amount of solute it can hold at a given temperature. In an unsaturated solution, the solvent has not dissolved the maximum amount of solute it can hold at that temperature, meaning more solute could still be dissolved.
An unsaturated solution contains less dissolved solute than the solvent can hold at a given temperature and pressure. This means that more solute could be added to the solution without it fully dissolving.
It speeds it up. It also allows the solvent to hold more of the solute.
That is called the saturation point, where the solvent has dissolved the maximum amount of solute it can hold at a particular temperature. Any additional solute added beyond this point will not dissolve and will remain as solid particles in the solution.
A saturated solution is one that has achieved the maximum amount of solute that can be dissolved in a solvent at a given temperature. This means the solution cannot hold any more solute and any additional solute will not dissolve.
When a mixture is saturated, it means that it has reached its maximum capacity to dissolve a solute at a particular temperature. Any additional solute added will not be able to dissolve further in the mixture.
That is called a saturated solution, where no more solute can dissolve into the solvent at that temperature.