That is approximately 1/3 tablespoon.
It is about 1/3 of a tablespoon.
As with all conversion between a volume of a granular solid and his weight results are to be taken with cautions but here is a rapid approachTable salt has a density of around 1.2 when in small crystalsA table spoon is 15 ml so it gives1 tablespoon = 18 g of salt
A tablespoon of glutamine typically weighs around 6 grams.
Consider a tablespoon of 30 mL and a density of 1,25 g/cm3 for powdered table salt.So 100 g salt is equivalent to approx. 3 tablespoons.
It depends on the ingredient. For most liquids and powders, there are about 15 grams in a tablespoon. However, for more dense or granular ingredients like sugar or salt, there are closer to 20 grams in a tablespoon.
5 grams of salt fills only 0.16 tablespoon ... 1/2 teaspoon of fine salt is roughly 5 grams
It is about 1/3 of a tablespoon.
That is 7.055 tablespoon
15 grams of water in tablespoon
A tablespoon is a unit of volume and a gram is a unit of weight. Accordingly without knowing what substance you are putting in the tablespoon we cannot answer the question.
1 table spoon = 15 g
Hold on here, I need to do some heavy calculation ... okay, done. One tablespoon of table salt contains 1.0 tablespoons of sodium chloride. Since the atomic weight of sodium chloride is 58.5, 1 meq of salt is 58.5 mg. Since one tablespoon = 14.8 ml and salt weights 1.02 g/ml, one tablespoon of salt weighs 15.2 g or 15,200 mg. So one tablespoon of salt = 15,200 / 58.5 = 260 mEQ.