Dissolve 36g in 100ml of water
Dissolve 36g in 100ml of water
-------------->lol ............ofcourse......what kind of question is this?
just add 10 g of the the salt (sodium chloride) to 25 ml water!!
:)
A saturated solution of sodium chloride has a concentration of NaCl higher than 360 g/L at 20 deg. C.
Dissolvig in water a mass of sodium chloride under the saturation point at a given temperature; for example at 20 0C the solubility of sodium chloride in water is 360,9 g/L.
Very simple: dissolve the desired amount of NaCl in water.
If a sodium chloride water solution contain more than 360,1 g NaCl to 1 L water, at 20 0C, the solution is saturated.
The role of saturated NaCl?
If 10 is 10 molar for you, this is a saturated solution of NaCl.
The common ion is chloride (Cl-).
Min. 36,69 g NaCl in 100 g solution.
The saturated solution of sodium chloride is 379,3 g for 1 kg solution at 8o oC.
The constant solubility product is modified.
When you raise the temperature of a saturated solution; you can add more solute and make it a super saturated solution because the molecules of the solvent will be able to attract more molecules of solute.
Saturation point of salt in water is about 26.5percent by weight at room temperature, so add about 26.5 gm NaCl into 100 mL of water.
It depends on what kind of solute was mixed in a solution. for example of NaCl, it would disolved if heated.
No, the dilute solutions of highly water soluble compounds are unsaturatd as solution of NaCl but dilute solution of AgCl or BaSO4 are saturated because they are very little soluble in water.
You have to Heat it!
The Molecular Weight of NaCl = 58.5 So to make 1L of 4M NaCl solution you need 4*58.5=234g of NaCl So to make 100mL of the above solution you need 23.4 grams of NaCl