1 mEq=1 mmol/valence e.g.For sodium, 1 mEq=1mmol/1 (valence of sodium=1) means, 1 mmol sodium=1 mEq of sodium take for calcium,valence=2 1 1 mEq of calcium=1mmol/2=0.5 mmol of calcium
If a base is neutralizing an acid, it will require same no. of miliequivalents as that of acid.You can calculate them by using the equation below:-Meq. of acid= meq. of basenormality of acid x volume of acid =normality of base x volume of base(molarity x n-factor x volume)acid = (molarity x n-factor x volume)baseAdded:1 Meq. base can neutralise (by definition) exactly 1 Mmol H+ or 1 Meq of any acid.
'mmol' means 'millimoles' , that is 'thousandths of a mole'. It is a symbol used in medical analysis. 1 mmol = 1/1000 moles.
Zinc is Zn; bicarbonate, also known as hydrogen carbonate, is HCO3; after taking into account the +2 charge of the Zn and the -1 charge of HCO3 we get: Zn(HCO3)2.
Ni(HCO3)2 Ni has a +2 charge and bicarbonate aka hydrogen carbonate HCO3 has a -1 charge.
1 mMol of k3po4 = 6 mEq as phospate
Milli equivalents and milli moles are units used to describe molecular or ionic grades of concentration. A milli equivalent or mEq is derived by dividing the concentration in millimol or mmol by the valency of the ion involved.Eg: 1 mEq of sodium Na+ = 1 mmol of sodium (because valency is 1)whereas 1 mEq of Ca2+ = .5 mmol of calcium. (because valency is
1 mmol of Kphos = 1.46 KCL
it depends on what you are measuring. Meq is a measure of charge. If you are measuring H+ which has one positive charge, 1 mmol = 1 meq for Ca2+, 1 mmol = 2 meq so the conversion will depend on the charge of the ion or molecule
1 mEq=1 mmol/valence e.g.For sodium, 1 mEq=1mmol/1 (valence of sodium=1) means, 1 mmol sodium=1 mEq of sodium take for calcium,valence=2 1 1 mEq of calcium=1mmol/2=0.5 mmol of calcium
A meq is not an recognised measure of distance.
The answer is 2.53 mEq.Here is my work:99mg Potassium x (1mmol/39.0983mg potassium) x (1mEq/1mmol) = 2.53 mEq* The 39.0983 comes from the atomic mass of Potassium which means that 39.0983 grams = 1 mol (which also means 39.0983 milligrams = 1 millimol (mmol). 1 mmol of potassium = 1 milliequivalent (mEq) because milliequivalents are just the number of mmols of charges (positive/negative), and since potassium has 1 positive charge 1 mmol = 1 mEq.This is the over-the-counter dose. Most prescriptions are for 20mEq doses but usually range from 8mEq to 40mEq.
The question is vauge. Moles in atomic scale are equilivant to the number of electrons in the vallance of the magnesium atom ( the outer ring of electrons). Usually supplements are measured in milligrams or sometimes in international units (iu). What are you trying to find?
If a base is neutralizing an acid, it will require same no. of miliequivalents as that of acid.You can calculate them by using the equation below:-Meq. of acid= meq. of basenormality of acid x volume of acid =normality of base x volume of base(molarity x n-factor x volume)acid = (molarity x n-factor x volume)baseAdded:1 Meq. base can neutralise (by definition) exactly 1 Mmol H+ or 1 Meq of any acid.
Per FDA factsheet ... Potassium chloride extended-release capsules, USP, 10 mEq is an oral dosage form of microencapsulated potassium chloride containing 750 mg of potassium chloride USP equivalent to 10 mEq of potassium.
The question needs more detail. mmol is a measure of concentration and ml is a volume. Your question asks literally "If I place 1 mmol of a substance in a litre of water how many ml is this? I don't think you ment that.
1 mol = 103 mmol Conversely, 1 mmol = 10-3 mol For example: 25 mol x 103 mmol/1 mol = 25000 mmol and, 3.2 mmol x 10-3 mol/1 mmol = 0.0032 mol