From my understanding, it would be like any other average. You would take the the molarities of the solations, and add them up, and divide by the number of molarities. For example, let's say you did a titration using NaOH, and you did this 3 times, getting results like .30 M, .40 M, and .50 M, you would add those three up and get 1.2 M. Now you would divide that number by the number of titrations, which in this instance is obviously 3, so when you do that, you should get the average molarity of .40 M. Hope this helped at all. Bye.
100,000 gallon swimming pool requires 50 pounds of baking soda to maintain ph. what will be the initial molarity of baking soda in the pool water?
Number of Moles = concentration * volume (in litres)
you have to learn chemistry
0.125m
Titration is used to calculate the molarity of an acid or base (standardising), using a base or an acid respectively with a known molarity (primary standard).
Molarity (M) = mole of solute (mol)/volume of solution that it is dissolved into (L) Make sure that the volume is converted to L if it isn't already, otherwise you will get wrong answers.
Number of Moles = concentration * volume (in litres)
Yes, you definitely need to know the molecular weight of a compound to calculate molarity.
you have to learn chemistry
0.125m
Titration is used to calculate the molarity of an acid or base (standardising), using a base or an acid respectively with a known molarity (primary standard).
M, which stands for molarity, is calculated by the equation: M=moles/Liters
volume of the solution
Molarity (M) = mole of solute (mol)/volume of solution that it is dissolved into (L) Make sure that the volume is converted to L if it isn't already, otherwise you will get wrong answers.
calculate final molarity of the solution if 11ml of 5m solution is made up to 20ml
0.5 molar
Molarity (M) indicates the number of moles of solute per liter of solution (moles/Liter) and is one of the most common units used to measure the concentration of a solution. Molarity can be used to calculate the volume of solvent or the amount of solute.
Not enough information. To calculate mass, you would need volume and density (mass = volume x density).