if you add salt in water and you have loads of salt at the bottom of the glass that wont dissolve, the solution is supersaturated with salt for example adding 50grams of table salt in 100grams of water
You can't make an assessment on supersaturation based on the graph. As you cant tell if the solute is dissolved or not. If there is more solute in the solution than what it can hold it may just be saturated and the extra is sitting on the bottom of the solution. You must know the history of the solution first to be able to tell if it is supersaturated e.g. heated and then cooled.
Finally, someone that gets it. I can't find a video that makes this point. Why I can't recommend to my students. Also Ce2(SO4)3 is not a gas! Ionic--just happens to go against the general rule.
Thanks , you just taught me everything I need to know for my test
In 10 minutes you just taught me better than my chemistry teacher did in 3 full class periods.... thank you
do you have mr B.
@@_itzomar1952 wat
We don’t even get 3 classes to go over stuff. We only get a day lol
Amazing video! Covers the topic cleanly and completely.
Thanks for the video! It makes a lot more sense now!
My son and I we are greatful
Thaku sir u are teaching very well 😀😀
Thank you very very much,I thought it was difficult but you made it simple
Thank you so much !! This video was informative and helpful..
This video was extremely helpful thank you
Thank you so much, this really helped me understand and calculate solubility curves.
Well explained👍
Thank you very very much. i understand it sooo much!!!
This was really useful. Thank you!
Thnx
My teacher told me to watch this
Wow, so helpful!
Thank you so much
if you add salt in water and you have loads of salt at the bottom of the glass that wont dissolve, the solution is supersaturated with salt for example adding 50grams of table salt in 100grams of water
Thank you
i thought potassium chromate was K2CrO4
Thank you!
thanks!😊☺
how would I solve if it says liters
thx
Sol~you~te friend, not sol~ote
Play Minecraft, and become god, then make a science video about it
Who is here for school
hi aiden
can u guess who it is
yo
Thank you
Thank you so much
You can't make an assessment on supersaturation based on the graph. As you cant tell if the solute is dissolved or not. If there is more solute in the solution than what it can hold it may just be saturated and the extra is sitting on the bottom of the solution. You must know the history of the solution first to be able to tell if it is supersaturated e.g. heated and then cooled.
Finally, someone that gets it. I can't find a video that makes this point. Why I can't recommend to my students. Also Ce2(SO4)3 is not a gas! Ionic--just happens to go against the general rule.
it helps me alot