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saturation
(redirected from colour saturations)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia 0.42 sec.

saturation, of an organic compound

saturation, of an organic compound, condition occurring when its molecules contain no double or triple bonds and thus cannot undergo addition reactions. For example, ethane (H3C-CH3) is a saturated compound. A compound is called unsaturated if it can undergo addition reactions. In the unsaturated compound ethene (H2C=CH2), the carbon-carbon double bond readily reacts, e.g., with hydrogen to form ethane.

saturation, of a solution

saturation, of a solution: see solution solution, in chemistry, homogeneous mixture of two or more substances. The dissolving medium is called the solvent , and the dissolved material is called the solute. A solution is distinct from a colloid or a suspension .
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saturation

State of an organic compound in which all its carbon atoms are linked by single covalent bonds. Saturation also means the state of a solution or vapour (see vaporization) in which it has the highest possible concentration of the dissolved or vaporized material at a given pressure and temperature. Though it is sometimes possible to bring about supersaturation (a concentration exceeding the equilibrium value), such solutions or vapours are unstable and spontaneously revert to the saturated state, accompanied by the transformation of the excess material to the solid or liquid form (precipitation). See also fatty acid; hydrogenation.


saturation

(1) On magnetic media, a condition in which the magnetizable particles are completely aligned and a more powerful writing signal will not improve the reading back.

(2) In a bipolar transistor, a condition in which the current on the gate (the trigger) is equal to or greater than what is necessary to close the switch.

(3) In a diode, a condition in which the diode is fully conducting.

(4) In a color, the amount of black it contains. For example, a fully saturated red would be a pure red. The less saturated, the more pastel the appearance. See chrominance, luminance and hue.


saturation
1. Chem the state of a chemical compound, solution, or vapour when it is saturated
2. Meteorol the state of the atmosphere when it can hold no more water vapour at its particular temperature and pressure, the relative humidity then being 100 per cent
3. the attribute of a colour that enables an observer to judge its proportion of pure chromatic colour
4. Physics the state of a ferromagnetic material in which it is fully magnetized. The magnetic domains are then all fully aligned
5. Electronics the state of a valve or semiconductor device that is carrying the maximum current of which it is capable and is therefore unresponsive to further increases of input signal
6. the level beyond which demand for a product or service is not expected to increase


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And she notes that while the next two years will have colors (or colours) such as camel, dark brown, orange, white, and silver, "Beyond the next couple of years, there will be the emergence of hot acid brights like lime chartreuse and muted, greener versions of chartreuse, industrial grays and colours inspired from liquid sources such as clean, pure bright colour saturations and dehydrated, grayer softer undertones.
 
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