protoplasm tends to shrink due to NaCl..causing it to dehydrate and pulling the water out of the cell..
The freezing point of the solution depends on the NaCl concentration.
A 0.0% NaCl solution is a solution with absolutely no NaCl.
The concentration of NaCl in a solution that contains 0.9 NaCl is 0.9 grams of NaCl per 100 grams of solution.
A supersaturated solution is obtained.
If 10 is 10 molar for you, this is a saturated solution of NaCl.
first nothing seems to happend, but minutes later a sedimentation or deposit of nacl will be clearly seen. this nacl will be forming on the sorrounding of the recipient were you heat up the solution
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
Yes, because the solution of NaCl is an electrolyte.
You could titrate equal volumes of 1M solution of NaOH and 1M solution of HCl to obtain 1M solution of NaCl.
Pure solide NaCl is not electrically conductive. The water solution of NaCl is an electrolyte and is conductive.
The pH of a solution containing NaCl is neutral, around 7.
To determine the amount of NaCl in the solution, you first need to calculate the moles of NaCl present. Using the given molarity (2.48 M) and the volume of the solution (assumed to be 806 g = 806 ml for water), you can find the moles of NaCl. Then, you convert the moles of NaCl to grams using the molar mass of NaCl (58.44 g/mol) to find the amount of NaCl in the solution.