If your working with cells, you want to be using saline instead of water to prevent osmosis. Also, you can use it as an electrolyte.
This solution has 5 % sucrose and 0,45 5 sodium chloride.
The answer is 0,9 g pure, dried NaCl.
Isotonic
The answer is 26,3 g.
You need 841,536 g NaCl.
Water and salt form a solution, not a mixture. All solutions of NaCl in water are "salt water," but if you get the concentration of NaCl over 3.5 percent they prefer to use the term brine.
The Molecular Weight of NaCl = 58.5 So to make 1L of 4M NaCl solution you need 4*58.5=234g of NaCl So to make 100mL of the above solution you need 23.4 grams of NaCl
Most use a .045 gap.
For the hydration of the organism.
To find a percent.
"0.10 percent NaCl" is a concentration of sodium chloride in a solution. There are a lot of ways of expressing concentrations, but they all describe "how much of this" is in "how much of that." Percentages, such as yours, is commonly used in marketable goods, while chemists, and medical people use different ones. 0.10 percent NaCl means that for every liter of water, there is 1 gram of salt (1000:1 part ratio). That is not much: a pinch in a little more than a quart.
16 spark plugs total Use what the factory has in it. Champion re14mcc4 .045 gap
A change from 320 to 380 would be an 18.75% increase