No. It refers to the relative volumes of solute to solvent, not the physical amount.
The concentration of a solution is basically how strong the solution is.
Concentration is a measure of mass in a certain volume, its called m/v concentration. (Others: m/m concentration, v/v concentration)
The concentration of a solution is typically given in terms of the volume of solution, in liters.
The measure of the H+ concentration is the pH.
If the concentration of alcohol and water solution is 25 percent alcohol by volume, the volume of alcohol in a 200 solution is 50.
False
Acidimetry is the process of determining the concentration of an acid in a solution, while alkalimetry is the process of determining the concentration of a base in a solution. Both techniques involve titrating the substance of interest with a standard solution of known concentration to determine the unknown concentration.
first measure the volume of the sample solution needed to change the blue color of the DCPIP solution into colourless. then, weigh the mass of the sample solution. finally calculate the concentration by using the formula: volume required t change the color of DCPIP solution (dm) per mass of the sample solution (g)
That depends on the concentration of the solution. mg measures mass, where mL measures volume.
The concentration in moles of a substance in the solution
Yes. The volume you have of a particular solution does not have anything to do with the concentration of that solution.
Concentration of a solution is calcuated by dividing the number of moles by the volume. C = n/v.