if we add 100 g of glucose to 100 mL water at 25 °C, 91 g dissolve. Nine grams of solid remain on the bottom, and the solution is saturated at this temperature.
The mass of sugar is 100 g.
This would be considered a saturated solution if all 25g of KCl are completely dissolved in the 100g of water at 30 degrees Celsius.
100g of water is equal to 100g of ice in terms of weight, since they both have the same mass. However, the volume of the ice may be slightly larger due to the lower density of ice compared to water.
Well, honey, 100g of gold has a greater volume than 100g of water. Gold is denser than water, so even though they weigh the same, gold takes up less space. It's like comparing a compact car to a big ol' SUV - same weight, different sizes. Hope that clears things up for ya!
The number of grams is the number of cm3. e.g. 300g = 300cm3
The mass of sugar is 100 g.
This would be considered a saturated solution if all 25g of KCl are completely dissolved in the 100g of water at 30 degrees Celsius.
When you add 100g of table sugar (sucrose) to 50g of water at 0°C, the sugar will dissolve in the water, increasing the solution's concentration. However, since the amount of sugar exceeds what can be dissolved at that temperature, not all of the sugar will dissolve, and you'll likely have some undissolved sugar remaining at the bottom. The resulting solution will be a saturated sugar solution at 0°C. Additionally, the temperature of the solution may slightly change depending on the heat of dissolution.
7
100g of water is equal to 100g of ice in terms of weight, since they both have the same mass. However, the volume of the ice may be slightly larger due to the lower density of ice compared to water.
Well, honey, 100g of gold has a greater volume than 100g of water. Gold is denser than water, so even though they weigh the same, gold takes up less space. It's like comparing a compact car to a big ol' SUV - same weight, different sizes. Hope that clears things up for ya!
The volume of water is the same as the mass of water. So if you have 100ml of water you actually have 100g of water.
The number of grams is the number of cm3. e.g. 300g = 300cm3
100g of lead would occupy a larger volume compared to 100g of water because lead has a higher density of 11.34 g/ml, whereas water has a density of 0.995 g/ml. The higher the density of a substance, the more mass it can hold in a smaller volume.
Ethanol produces around 80% by fermenting 100g of sugar produce.
yes it does
100g flour is equal to