15 - 16 gram of salt
The amount of salt that can be dissolved in 200ml of water at room temperature depends on the solubility of salt in water. Typically, at room temperature, you can dissolve about 36 grams of salt in 200ml of water.
To make a 22.3% salt solution, you would dissolve 22.3 grams of salt in 100 grams of solution (salt + water). This would result in a solution where 22.3% of the total weight is salt.
Yes, a solution is considered concentrated when there is a large amount of solute (salt in this case) dissolved in a given amount of solvent (water in this case). With 20ml of salt in 50ml of water, the concentration of the solution would likely be high.
Every 100 grams (100 millilitres) of boiling water (even hard water) will dissolve a maximum of about 40 grams of salt, so anything in excess of that amount just will not dissolve. If your poured a teaspoon of salt grains into a pan of boiling water it would dissolve immediately - almost no time at all.
There are 3000 milligrams in 3 grams of salt.
Approx. 7,2 g at 20 0C.
This well known formula should lead you on your path: Density (grams/ml) = mass/volume
The resulting mass of the mixture is 35 grams (5 grams of salt + 30 grams of water).
Suppose you get enough water to dissolve 10 grams in 15 minutes (I assume you're talking about dissolving in water). Then you can dissolve another 10 grams by fetching an equal volume of water and doing the same, also in 15 minutes. Keep doing this. You'll never run out of water. So I suppose the answer is "as many grams of salt as you can find". Or, reading the question differently, the answer could be "as many grams of salt you can find in 15 minutes."
100ml
The amount of salt that can be dissolved in 200ml of water at room temperature depends on the solubility of salt in water. Typically, at room temperature, you can dissolve about 36 grams of salt in 200ml of water.
It depends on the type of salt and its particle size, but typically it would take about 35-36 spoonfuls of table salt to dissolve in 1 liter of water. The solubility of salt in water is about 357 grams per liter at room temperature.
probably a supersaturated solution if you heat it to dissolve all of the salt
To make a 22.3% salt solution, you would dissolve 22.3 grams of salt in 100 grams of solution (salt + water). This would result in a solution where 22.3% of the total weight is salt.
Natrium is the latin name for sodium. Natrium chloride is salt. Measure 3 grams of salt, dissolve into 97 grams of water.
Yes, a solution is considered concentrated when there is a large amount of solute (salt in this case) dissolved in a given amount of solvent (water in this case). With 20ml of salt in 50ml of water, the concentration of the solution would likely be high.
5 grams of sea-salt.