If we add 1 L of water to 1 L of 2 M NaCl solution will give 2 L of 1 M NaCl solution
molarity of 5% NaCl solution would be 1.25M.
molten NaCl and An aqueous solution of NaCl will be conducting due to the presence of free ions in these.
Molten NaCl and aqueous solution of NaCl will conduct elecctricity due to the presence of free (movable) ions.
It depends on the final solution Volume you want to prepare. For 100ml of a 6M NaCL solution, you add 35.1g of NaCl to water until you reach 100ml. Dissolve and autoclave for 15 mins.
It could be done by electrolysis of a molten solution of NaCl, (not a dilute solution).
You could titrate equal volumes of 1M solution of NaOH and 1M solution of HCl to obtain 1M solution of NaCl.
A 0.0% NaCl solution is a solution with absolutely no NaCl.
If 10 is 10 molar for you, this is a saturated solution of NaCl.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solutionMoles of solute = Liters of solution * Molarity ( 100 mL = 0.1 Liters )Moles of NaCl = 0.1 Liters * 0.20 M NaCl= 0.02 moles NaCl============
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
Yes, because the solution of NaCl is an electrolyte.
Pure solide NaCl is not electrically conductive. The water solution of NaCl is an electrolyte and is conductive.
117 grams of NaCl
This solution is homogeneous.
The electrical conductivity of the solution will be higher if the concentration of NaCl increase.
Sodium chloride is a solute when is dissolved in water (the solvent).
molarity of 5% NaCl solution would be 1.25M.