Sodium citrate is considered an organic compound.
it contains sodium carbonate (inorganic), copper sulphate (inorganic) and sodium citrate (organic).
they are both organic and inorganic
organic
it is organic
Inorganic. Organic is carbon-based.
It is organic substance
yes you can use either trisodium citrate or sodium citrate
it contains sodium carbonate (inorganic), copper sulphate (inorganic) and sodium citrate (organic).
You would wan to dilute the trisodium citrate in distilled water to create a 1% solution. So if you wanted 100mL of solution, you would mix 1mL of trisodium citrate with 99mL of distilled sterile water.
Citrate is the salt, an ester of citric acid, and the polyatomic anion that is found in solution. The ester can be triethyl citrate and the salt can be a trisodium citrate.
They are two completely different substances Sodium nitrate is NaNO3, a compound of sodium, nitrogen, and oxygen. It is an inorganic salt and a strong oxidizer. It is sometimes used as a fertilizer or in black powder. There are 3 variants of sodium citrate: Monosodium citrate (NaH2C6H5O7), disodium citrate (Na2HC6H5O7), and trisodium citrate (Na3C6H5O7). All three are compounds of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. They are organic salts commonly used as food additives.
they are both organic and inorganic
it is organic
organic
it is organic
Capping agents such as trisodium citrate are used to stop growth of nanoparticles and stabilise them from aggregation. Its effects are generally short lived though, it has been reported though that using trisodium citrate with the lee and miesel method can lead to particles that are stable for up to a month.
Inorganic. Organic is carbon-based.