20ml of salt?
ml is not the right magnitude here
if it is mg than it is not concentrated
The amount of salt that can dissolve in 20mL of water depends on the solubility of the salt at that temperature. For common table salt (sodium chloride), approximately 36 grams can dissolve in 20mL of water at room temperature.
Add More Salt to make it more concentrated and add more wtaer to make it less concentrated
The percentage strength of the solution is 20%. This is calculated by dividing the mass of the salt (10g) by the total mass of the solution (10g salt + 50g water) and multiplying by 100.
* 50 g salt/100 g water is a more concentrated but a saturated sodium chloride solution (the solubility of NaCl at 20 0C is approx. 36 g/100 mL). * 18 g salt/90 g water is a 20 % sodium chloride solution.
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The amount of salt that can dissolve in 20mL of water depends on the solubility of the salt at that temperature. For common table salt (sodium chloride), approximately 36 grams can dissolve in 20mL of water at room temperature.
No major effects. The salt water and the water join to become a less concentrated salt solution than the salt water but a more concentrated salt solution than the regular water.
100ml
5 grams of salt in 10 grams of water is more concentrated (50%) compared to 18 grams of salt in 90 grams of water (20%).
SALT
Water,
Tricky question. Are you talking about the concentration of salt in the water or the concentration of water in the salt? It is unusual to talk about the concentration of water unless it is dissolved in another solvent like alcohol. Pure water has a constant concentration of 55.6 mol/dm3. Water is more concentrated without salt in it.
Approx. 7,2 g at 20 0C.
Add More Salt to make it more concentrated and add more wtaer to make it less concentrated
Water,
Brine is a salt solution. It does not need to be concentrated in order to be brine.
a concentrated salt water. ex. sea water