There are no calories in salt.
About 5,000 mg of sodium.
One teaspoon of table salt typically contains about 2,300 milligrams of sodium. This is because sodium chloride, the chemical name for table salt, is made up of about 40% sodium by weight. Therefore, in a 1 teaspoon serving of table salt, you would be consuming approximately 2,300 milligrams of sodium.
One teaspoon (5 milliliters) of table salt has 2,325 mg of sodium
combination of sodium and chloride, has 2,325 milligrams (mg) of sodium
This depends on the volume of the teaspoon (which is not a metrological device) and the apparent density of the salt; possible up to 3 g.
2000 mg of salt is equivalent to 2 grams. This amount is roughly equal to one teaspoon of table salt, as one teaspoon typically contains about 2300 mg of sodium. It's important to monitor salt intake, as excessive consumption can lead to health issues such as high blood pressure.
One teaspoon of salt contains 2000 mg of sodium, so 380 mg of sodium would be about 1/5 a teaspoon of salt.Read more: My_soup_label_says_380_grams_of_sodium_-_how_many_teaspoons_of_salt_would_that_equal
Since table salt is the stuff you can see and measure, it is useful to know that one teaspoon of table salt weighs about 6 g, or 6,000 mg. There are about 2.4 g sodium in one teaspoon salt. * this is from http://www.ultracycling.com/nutrition/hyponatremia2.html
One stick of butter typically contains about 1/4 teaspoon of salt.
TOO MUCH! well around 180 ml of sodium. try no salted ketchup it tastes the same!
Technically, A teaspoon is not a unit of weight or quantity, but of volume; i.e. 500 mg of sodium x (57.5/23.0) = 1250 mg of salt.In this case 840 mg X (57.5/23.0) = 2100 mg of salt (approximately)
2300 milligrams in one teaspoon of table salt