when a solvent can hold no more solute it is called saturated
If a solution has more solute than it can hold, it is called supersaturated. This means that the solution is unstable and may precipitate out excess solute if disturbed.
The solvent can hold more solute when it is heated. Because on heating the solubility of a solvent increases.
no
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.
Adding more solute to a saturated aqueous solution causes the excess solute to precipitate out of the solution as solid particles. This process is known as precipitation and helps to decrease the concentration of the solute in the solution, allowing for more solute to dissolve.
A Saturated Solution can no longer hold any more solute in solution.
If a solution has more solute than it can hold, it is called supersaturated. This means that the solution is unstable and may precipitate out excess solute if disturbed.
Supersaturation.
A solution is saturated when it can hold no more solute, and any additional solute precipitates.
An unsaturated solution
A solution is saturated when it can hold no more solute, and any additional solute precipitates.
An unsaturated solution
saturated.
No. A supersaturated solution holds more solute than the solvent could normally hold.
A saturated solution is a solution that cannot hold any more solute at a given temperature, including room temperature. This occurs when the maximum amount of solute has been dissolved in the solvent, resulting in a state of equilibrium between the dissolved and undissolved solute.
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.
It is a supersaturated solution.