There is an average of 12.5 to 14.5 mg of sodium in well water, but this can vary greatly.
The amount of sodium in well water can vary but the average is between 12.5 to 14.5 mg.
there is no sodium in carbonated water
Well water can contain any mineral that's in the ground -including sodium .Well water can contain any mineral that's in the ground -including sodium .
water to sodium chlorate weedkiller
Sodium is MUCH faster.
If sodium reabsorption increases, water reabsorption increases as well.
all depends on how much water you put in and how much sodium chloride you used
YES there is because: sodium intake and water, and I tried to search for some of them, but that didn't help. Are there clear cut limits on sodium and water. I mean I know you are supposed to have as little sodium as possible, and as much water. But lets say you eat 1500mg of sodium, is there an amount of water that will flush that out of your system?
They regulate sodium and potassium in your cells. If they fail the sodium rushes in. Water follows sodium and too much water in a cell causes the cell to rupture and die.
When a mixture of sodium chloride and water is heated to dryness, the residue is sodium chloride, because the boiling point of sodium chloride is much higher than the boiling point of water.
At 20 0C the solubility of sodium chloride in water is approx. 360 g/L.
Much higher. Water melts around 1 0C. At this temperature and much higher, sodium oxide is a solid.
Sodium doesn't dissolve in water, it reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide and hydrogen: sodium + water ----> sodium hydroxide + hydrogen