The density of sodium chloride (NaCl) is 2.165 grams per milliliter.
Chloride is an ion. It cannot exist alone, but must be with some positive ion. Potassium chloride, sodium chloride, lithium chloride, copper (II) chloride, etc. are compounds and each has a certain density.
The density of a 1 M solution of sodium hydroxide is approximately 1.04 g/mL at room temperature.
Since sodium chloride has equal parts of sodium and chlorine by weight, you would need 29.3 grams of sodium to create 29.3 grams of sodium chloride.
To find the answer, we multiply the 7 grams of NaCl by the ratio of the molar mass of chlorine over the molar mass of sodium chloride. By doing this, we find that there are about 4.25 grams of chlorine in 7 grams of NaCl.
Does not convert; milligrams (mg) and grams (g) are measures of weight or mass and mL (milliliters) is a measure of volume.
the molar mass of sodium hydroxide is 40g/mol mike
To find the mass of the sodium chloride, you can use the formula: mass = density × volume. Given the density of sodium chloride is 2.16 g/cm³ and the volume is 4.00 cm³, the mass would be 2.16 g/cm³ × 4.00 cm³ = 8.64 grams. Therefore, the mass of the sodium chloride piece is 8.64 grams.
1.38 grams/milliliter
600 mL of 0,9 % sodium chloride: 6 x 0,9 = 5,4 grams NaCl
Chloride is an ion. It cannot exist alone, but must be with some positive ion. Potassium chloride, sodium chloride, lithium chloride, copper (II) chloride, etc. are compounds and each has a certain density.
The density of a 1 M solution of sodium hydroxide is approximately 1.04 g/mL at room temperature.
Since sodium chloride has equal parts of sodium and chlorine by weight, you would need 29.3 grams of sodium to create 29.3 grams of sodium chloride.
water density (at standard temp of approx 25C and pressure of 1 atm; "STP") 1 gram per cubic centimeter, or 1 gram per milliliter (density of H2O vs T: http://www.simetric.co.uk/si_water.htm)methylene chloride density, same conditions, 1.3266 grams per cubic centimeter, or 1.3266 grams per milliliter
2.08 grams/milliliter
23.3772 grams are there in four tenths moles of sodium chloride
To find the answer, we multiply the 7 grams of NaCl by the ratio of the molar mass of chlorine over the molar mass of sodium chloride. By doing this, we find that there are about 4.25 grams of chlorine in 7 grams of NaCl.
It depends on the concentration of sodium chloride.