170k views
3 votes
What kind of solution would you have if it contained 50 grams of sodium chloride in 100 mL of water at 30˚C?

1 Answer

2 votes

Answer:

Supersaturated solution.

Step-by-step explanation:

Hello!

In this case, according to the types of solution in terms of the relative amounts of solute and solvent, we can define a point called solubility at which the amount of solute is no longer dissolved in the solvent; thus, a value of solute/solvent less than the solubility is related to unsaturated solutions, equal to the solubility is related to the saturated solutions and more than the solubility to supersaturated solutions.

Thus, since solubility is temperature-dependent, at 30 °C the solubility of sodium chloride is 36.09 g per 100 mL of water; which means that, since the solution has 50 g of sodium chloride, more than 36.09 g, we infer this is a supersaturated solution.

Best regards!

User Sherryl
by
5.2k points