It sounded sorta like asalacedic Acid. Very hard to completley conjure the name up after so many many years have passed and no one uses the word or words any more, sorta like the word, anaflogestine.
Calcium Carbonate
The answer depends on what is being measured: the mass of the mixture that makes up the tablet or the mass of the active ingredient. It also depends on the mass of the tablet itself.
None. Except that the amount of the active ingredient in the 500 mg tablet may be more accurate.
Sodium hydroxide is added to the conical flask to create a basic environment, which helps to break down the tablet and facilitate the reaction necessary for the analysis of the active ingredient. This reaction is important for quantifying the amount of the active ingredient present in the tablet.
No, the weight of a tablet is not necessarily the same as the dosage it contains. The weight of the tablet includes the active ingredient as well as other substances that help form the tablet such as binding agents and fillers. Therefore, an 8mg tablet may weigh more than 8mg.
People take Metatime 500 tablet to lower and control blood sugar. The active ingredient in Metatime is Metformin in a time released formulation.
You seems to be from India. Any way, you have to mention the name of the tablet. It is better if you mention the ingredients as well. Some times the google fail to give information about the ingredient just on the basis of name of the tablet. Nobody can answer the question correctly.
To enhance your wine tasting experience using a wine tablet, simply drop the tablet into your glass of wine and allow it to dissolve. The tablet will release flavors and aromas that can enhance the overall taste and aroma of the wine, providing a more complex and enjoyable tasting experience.
Tablets all vary. They are generally made up of a small amount of an active ingredient which is 'carried' in a larger amount of a harmless substance. The value of Mg printed on a packet is the quantity of the active ingredient in any one tablet - the tablet will weigh more than the value of the active ingredient. Depending on the medicine in question, the number of Mg in a tablet will vary - some brands come on different strengths - I take a 150mg and a 75mg dose of a particular medicine. It depends on the drug. 200mg does not represent the weight of the tablets, it reflects the concentration of the drug in the tablets. If you read the label on the bottle, it should tell you how many mg of the drug there are per tablet and you can figure from there how to reach a 200mg dose.
The active ingredient "paracetamol" is a compound but the tables is likely to be formed from this and a other ingredients so it is a mixture.
It is a chemical change. Depending on the antacid, the active ingredient in the tablet (which is a base) will react with the hydrochloric acid to produce water, a salt, and sometimes carbon dioxide.
Cipla is a manufacturer of medicines, it depends on mechanism of action of active ingredient of medicine to work. Every medicine have diffrent mechanism of action.