molarity of 5% NaCl solution would be 1.25M.
To calculate the molarity of a solution, you would need to divide the number of moles of solute (in this case, 10 mol of NaCl) by the volume of solution in liters (in this case, 200 L). Molarity = moles of solute / liters of solution So, Molarity = 10 mol / 200 L = 0.05 M.
It depends on the final solution Volume you want to prepare. For 100ml of a 6M NaCL solution, you add 35.1g of NaCl to water until you reach 100ml. Dissolve and autoclave for 15 mins.
This molarity is 3 M.
After transferring 50 grams of the 1.7 M NaCl solution to a new beaker, the final amount of NaCl in the original beaker will be 50 grams. To find the new molarity, you would first calculate the new moles of NaCl in the beaker, then divide by the total volume of the solution in liters. The molarity will be reduced in the original beaker due to the dilution from transferring a portion of the solution.
Molarity = moles of solute/volume of solution Find moles NaCl 55 grams NaCl (1mol NaCl/58.44 grams) = 0.941 moles NaCl Molarity = 0.941 moles NaCl/35 Liters = 0.027 Molarity NaCl ( sounds reasonable as 55 grams is not much in 35 Liters of water, which would be about 17.5 2 liter sodas )
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution Molarity = 6 Moles NaCl/2 Liters = 3 M NaCl ========
The molarity of the solution is calculated by dividing the moles of solute (0.250 mol NaCl) by the liters of solution (2.25 L). Molarity = moles of solute / liters of solution Molarity = 0.250 mol / 2.25 L = 0.111 M
To calculate the molarity of the NaCl solution, first convert the mass of NaCl to moles using its molar mass. The molar mass of NaCl is 58.44 g/mol. Then, divide the moles of NaCl by the volume of the solution in liters (750 mL = 0.75 L) to get the molarity. In this case, the molarity of the NaCl solution is 1.5 M.
Need moles NaCl first. 17.52 grams NaCl (1 mole NaCl/58.44 grams) = 0.29979 moles NaCl =====================Now. Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 2000 ml = 2 Liters ) Molarity = 0.29979 mole NaCl/2 Liters = 0.1499 M NaCl ----------------------
To calculate the molarity of a solution, you would need to divide the number of moles of solute (in this case, 10 mol of NaCl) by the volume of solution in liters (in this case, 200 L). Molarity = moles of solute / liters of solution So, Molarity = 10 mol / 200 L = 0.05 M.
It depends on the final solution Volume you want to prepare. For 100ml of a 6M NaCL solution, you add 35.1g of NaCl to water until you reach 100ml. Dissolve and autoclave for 15 mins.
To find the molarity, first calculate the moles of NaCl using its molar mass (58.44 g/mol). Then, divide the moles of NaCl by the volume of solution in liters (0.1 L) to get the molarity in moles per liter.
This molarity is 3 M.
A 0.0% NaCl solution is a solution with absolutely no NaCl.
1.3g
After transferring 50 grams of the 1.7 M NaCl solution to a new beaker, the final amount of NaCl in the original beaker will be 50 grams. To find the new molarity, you would first calculate the new moles of NaCl in the beaker, then divide by the total volume of the solution in liters. The molarity will be reduced in the original beaker due to the dilution from transferring a portion of the solution.
I suppose that this situation is not possible.