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100g of marmite contains 11g of salt A serving of 2g -- will contain 0.22g of salt
It is a water solution of salt.
The ions in the salt are surrounded by water molecules.
It doesn't look like anything...you can't see it.
A clear liquid. It is salt water.
Salt
A watch glass is a little circle dish of glass or pyrex (heat-safe-glass). it is a smooth shallow concave (cup-like) plate. It is used to watch a little amount of solution evaporate, leaving behind a little pile of whatever was dissolved in it. Salt-water, for example, would dry to leave a little pile of salt in the middle.
Salt look like little cristals particles.
100g of marmite contains 11g of salt A serving of 2g -- will contain 0.22g of salt
Please -rewrite this confusing mess so we can understand
If you have a pile of pure sodium chloride, it would be a compound. A lot of the salt used as table salt, though, is not pure sodium chloride and would be a mixture of several compounds. This is particularly true if you have a pile of sea salt.
Niemand weiß wirklich.
It is a water solution of salt.
At room temperature, about 35g of salt per 100g of water.
salt
like it has salt in it?
>30ppm in 100g =? mcg in 1g