if a liquid is unsaturated, this means that there is not as much possible solute in a solvent at a given temperature.
one example is: a glass of water (solvent) with sugar (solute) in it at 70 degrees Fahrenheit without as much sugar in it as it could have without being a suspension (undissolved sugar)
The description of an unsaturated lipid is that it is a type of fat that is found naturally in plant products such as nuts or seeds. Unsaturated lipids are liquid at room temperature.
Double
Lipid molecules with the maximum number of hydrogen atoms are referred to as saturated, not unsaturated. Unsaturated lipids have double bonds that reduce the number of possible hydrogen atoms.
The difference is related to which long chain fatty acid is incorporated. If it is a fatty acid that has double bonds, then it is an unsaturated lipid. If it contains fatty acids that have no double bonds, then it is a saturated lipid.
An unsaturated lipid is a type of lipid that contains one or more double bonds in its fatty acid chains. These double bonds create kinks in the fatty acid chains, preventing the lipids from packing tightly together. Unsaturated lipids are typically liquid at room temperature.
An unsaturated lipid is a fat in which there is at least one double bond within the fatty acid chain. Two kinds of fatty acid chains are monounsaturated and polyunsaturated.
An unsaturated lipid is a type of fat where there is a minimum of one double bond inside the fatty acid chain. The fatty acid chain may be monounsaturated or polyunsaturated.
Carbon-carbon double bonds.
unsaturated
The two types are saturated and unsaturated. In the unsaturated there are two subtypes: monounsaturated and polyunsaturated. There are five isomer types: cis-, trans-, ortho-, meta-, and para-
in saturated and unsaturated fatsin some vitamins and steroidsin biological membranes
ok unsaturated means when..uhhmm..for eg. when you eat ice cream it taste really good soo that means its unsaturared..so it baseically means taste better. good luck in chemestry/science!