Every Laboratory has specfic values that their Lab Medicine Docs have signed off as being Normal Values, however, generally The Intracellular Concentration of Chloride in Eukaryotic Cells is 5 milliMoles. The Extracellular Concentration of Chloride is 110 mM. The Intracellular Concentration of Calcium is < 1 mM The Extracellular Concentration of Calcium is 1.8 mM
10 mEQ/L
If the addition of excess silver nitrate precipitates 8.07 g silver chloride, the concentration of chloride ion in 229 mL solution is .25.
I believe it is Chloride? If you know the answer for sure please post it!! thank you!!
Aldosterone
The most common one is a solution of silver nitrate, which forms a white precipitate of silver chloride when added to a solution containing more than a minute concentration of chloride ions.
The chloride ion carries a -1 charge.
Potassium is the major intracellular ion, not sodium as was previously answered. Sodium is the major extracellular ion (along with chloride, and smaller amounts of potassium and bicarbonate)
Sodium ion is the most concentrated ion in the extracellular fluid.
If the addition of excess silver nitrate precipitates 8.07 g silver chloride, the concentration of chloride ion in 229 mL solution is .25.
active transport of calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum
Extracellulary, Sodium is major ion. Intracellular concentration of sodium is: 12 mEq/L Extracellular concentration of sodium is: 140 mEq/L Intracellularly, Potassium is major ion. Intracellular concentration of Potassiumis: 140 mEq/L Extracellular concentration of Potassiumis: 3.5-5 mEq/L These concetrations are maintained by Na+/K+ ATPase.
Gastric juice.
iron
In sea-water. as the bromide ion. Its concentration is far less than the chloride ion in sea-water.
I believe it is Chloride? If you know the answer for sure please post it!! thank you!!
it will diffuse faster becuase it is more concentrated
Potassium (K+)
Chloride ion is larger in size.