Solid precipitate, liquid solvent ) is made by adding a
seed crystal to a supersaturated solution of table sugar and water. The multiple crystals on the right were grown from a sugar cube, while the left was grown from a single seed taken from the right. A red dye was added to the solution for the left crystal, but was insoluble with the solid sugar, and only traces remain while the rest precipitated out. A solution of a chemical compound in a liquid will become supersaturated when the temperature of the
saturated solution is changed. In most cases solubility decreases with decreasing temperature; in such cases the excess of solute will rapidly separate from the solution as
crystals or an
amorphous powder. In a few cases the opposite effect occurs. The example of
sodium sulfate in water is well-known and this was why it was used in early studies of solubility.
Recrystallization is a process used to purify chemical compounds. A mixture of the impure compound and solvent is heated until the compound has dissolved. If there is some solid impurity remaining it is removed by
filtration. When the temperature of the solution is subsequently lowered it briefly becomes supersaturated and then the compound crystallizes out until
chemical equilibrium at the lower temperature is achieved. Impurities remain in the
supernatant liquid. In some cases crystals do not form quickly and the solution remains supersaturated after cooling. This is because there is a thermodynamic barrier to the formation of a crystal in a liquid medium. Commonly this is overcome by adding a tiny crystal of the solute compound to the supersaturated solution, a process known as "seeding". Another process in common use is to rub a rod on the side of a glass vessel containing the solution to release microscopic glass particles which can act as nucleation centres. In industry,
centrifugation is used to separate the crystals from the supernatant liquid. Some compounds and mixtures of compounds can form long-living supersaturated solutions.
Carbohydrates are a class of such compounds; The thermodynamic barrier to formation of crystals is rather high because of extensive and irregular
hydrogen bonding with the solvent, water. For example, although
sucrose can be recrystallised easily, its hydrolysis product, known as "
invert sugar" or "golden syrup" is a mixture of
glucose and
fructose that exists as a viscous, supersaturated, liquid. Clear
honey contains carbohydrates which may crystallize over a period of weeks. Supersaturation may be encountered when attempting to crystallize a protein.
Gaseous solute, liquid solvent The solubility of a gas in a liquid increases with increasing gas pressure. When the external pressure is reduced, the excess gas comes out of solution. Fizzy drinks are made by subjecting the liquid to
carbon dioxide, under pressure. In
champagne the CO2 is produced naturally in the final stage of
fermentation. When the bottle or can is opened some gas is released in the form of bubbles. Release of gas from supersaturated tissues can cause an
underwater diver to suffer from
decompression sickness (a.k.a. the bends) when returning to the surface. This can be fatal if the released gas obstructs critical blood supplies causing ischaemia in vital tissues. Dissolved gases can be released during
oil exploration when a strike is made. This occurs because the oil in oil-bearing rock is under considerable pressure from the over-lying rock, allowing the oil to be supersaturated with respect to dissolved gases.
Liquid formation from a mixture of gases A
cloudburst is an extreme form of production of liquid water from a supersaturated mixture of air and water vapour in the
atmosphere. Supersaturation in the vapour phase is related to the
surface tension of liquids through the
Kelvin equation, the
Gibbs–Thomson effect and the
Poynting effect. The International Association for the Properties of Water and Steam (
IAPWS) provides a special equation for the
Gibbs free energy in the metastable-vapor region of water in its
Revised Release on the IAPWS Industrial Formulation 1997 for the Thermodynamic Properties of Water and Steam. All thermodynamic properties for the metastable-vapor region of water can be derived from this equation by means of the appropriate relations of thermodynamic properties to the Gibbs free energy. == Measurement ==