175.82 teaspoons
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
There are 16 Tablespoons in a cup regarless of what is being measured.
10 kg is mass = STP = 10 ltr volume
No, volume and mass are related but they are not the same. As an example, 1 liter of water has a mass of 1 kg whereas 1 liter of mercury has a much higher mass. Mathematically, Mass divided by volume is equal to density. Mass has units of Kg and volume has units of m3.
Density = mass / volume : Mass = volume * density : Volume = mass / densityDensity mild steel = 7.85 kg / litreSo >Mass = volume * density5 litres @ 7.85 kg per litre = 39.25 kilogramsAnd >Volume = mass / density5 kilograms / 7.85 = 0.637 litres
About 25mg per Kg of salt
1. Rock salt in the mine hasn't iodine. 2. Iodized table salt has 20+/-5 mg iodine/kg of salt, as potassium iodide or iodate.
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
No.
There are 16 Tablespoons in a cup regarless of what is being measured.
a table weighs 2000 kg
10 kg is mass = STP = 10 ltr volume
Ordinary table salt has a density of 2.165 g/cubic centimeters or about 6 grams per teaspoon. Different grades of salt including Kosher salt, sea salt and pickling salt will very from this depending on factors such as particle size. For precise measurement you should weigh the salt.
The Deed Sea has a salt density of 1.24 kg/L.
17.250 kg
This depends on the country, foods store, type of salt; in Romania the price of 1 kg fine iodised table salt is approx. 0,3 US $.
When you add table salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) to water, the salt dissolves into ions, Na+ and Cl-. The volume increases by a small factor, but the mass increases by a bigger factor. There are two reasons. One is simply that the NaCl is much denser than water to begin with, mainly because its ions have more mass than the oxygen and hydrogen atoms in the water molecules. Also, the ions bind nicely with the water molecules, so that the volume of the saltwater isn't as big as the water volume plus the salt volume.