10% salt solution is the equivalent of adding 100gr salt in a 900 ml (1000ml -100ml) of water. you now have one liter of a 10% solution.
Similarly 10 gr of salt in 90 ml water will give you 100 ml of a 10% salt solution.
However if you must use 100 ml of water you need to add 11 gr of salt to get a a 10% salt solution.
Hope that helps.
TA
Depends which salt it is as each salt will have its own solubility. Common table salt, NaCl has a solubility of ~ 36 g / 100mL at 25 oC. Therefore, 10g of NaCl would need 28 mL of water to completely dissolve it.
This is not a valid conversion; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass while mL or ml (milliliters) measure volume.
1 ppm = 1 mg/L
Therefore...
100 ppm = 100 mg/L = 0.1 g/L = 10g/100L
So, 10 grams of salt in 100 L is a 100 ppm solution.
The solubility of sodium chloride is 36,09 g NaCl/100 g water.
2 spoons to be accurate it is 1.6
Approximately 2 teaspoons
At 20 0C 28 mL water are sufficient.
34 grams of sugar = how many teaspoons
three
2 grams
1234567890-
4 grams of sugar equals 1 teaspoon. There are 3 teaspoons in one tablespoon. 40 grams of sugar equals 10 teaspoons of sugar. 10 teaspoons of sugar would equal 3 1/3 tablespoons.
That is 2 teaspoons.
15
That is 48 teaspoons
That is about 14 teaspoons.
That is approximately 4 teaspoons of sugar.
49.2892161458 grams of sugar are present in ten teaspoons
About 15 teaspoons
That is 4 teaspoons .
There are 13,440 teaspoons in 140 pounds of sugar. (There are 96 teaspoons in a pound.)
0.2 teaspoons in a gram of sugar.
There are 90.8 teaspoons in a pound. That means 1095 teaspoons is 12 pounds of sugar.
24 teaspoons of sugar make half a cup of sugar