A solution is saturated when it can hold no more solute, and any additional solute precipitates.
A solution is saturated when it can hold no more solute, and any additional solute precipitates.
Saturated solution
A saturated solution is one that can dissolve no more of the solute at a given temperature and pressure. This means that the maximum amount of solute has been dissolved in the solvent, and any additional solute will not dissolve and will instead form a precipitate.
An unsaturated solution contains less solute than a saturated solution and is able to dissolve additional solute until it reaches the point of saturation.
saturated solution because the solution is already at its maximum capacity to dissolve solute at that temperature. Any additional solute added will simply remain as solid undissolved particles at the bottom of the container.
A solution that contains the maximum amount of solute at a given temperature is called a saturated solution. This means that the solution is holding as much solute as it can at that specific temperature, with no additional solute able to dissolve.
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.
You add a solute to a solution until the solution will not dissolve any more of the solute and additional solute just settles to the bottom of the solution. At this point the solution is saturated.
It is called a saturated solution. This is created by adding in solute until no more solute dissolves. Then the excess solute is filtered. This works much better for a saturated solution at room temperature, as when the solution hits the filter paper, some will come out because it is colder.
A saturated solution.
Saturated