10 percent NaCl in distilled water is equivalent to 100 g/L NaCl.
Mix 100 mL of a 1 N solution with 900 mL of distilled water.
dissolve 10g of TCA in 100ml distilled water.
Yes, this is true.
When a potato strip is soaked in a 10 percent NaCl solution, it undergoes osmosis, where water moves out of the potato cells due to the higher concentration of salt outside the cells. This causes the cells to lose water, leading to shrinkage and the potato strip becoming bendable.
There is 20mg of NaCl in 200mg of a 10% salt solution. To convert mg to g, divide by 1000: 20mg = 0.02g of NaCl.
Please explain 10 !
A 10% NaCl solution is hypertonic to red blood cells. This means that the concentration of solutes outside the cells is higher than inside, causing water to move out of the cells, potentially leading to their shrinkage or dehydration.
suspended in a solution with the following composition: 10% NaCl, 10% glucose and 40% albumin.
Dissolve 10 g anhydrous iron(III) chloride in distilled water.
Convert the 200 mol of water to kilograms of water.
No, it is far from isotonic. there's even more salt in it than in ocean water (3%).A typical home recipe for an isotonic solution, used for nasal spray, consists of 1⁄2 litre of water, 4 to 5 grams (1 teaspoon) of salt. This is about 10 grams per Litre or 1 % NOT 10%
Doesn't make sense. However, it's likely that you are asking about 10% NaCl. Na is the symbol for chemical element sodium, and Cl is the symbol for chemical element chlorine, so the compound sodium chloride ("table salt") has the formula NaCl. Note that Na is capital-N lower-case-A, and chlorine is capital-C lower-case-L. Lower case L (l) can be mistaken for the letter I, which is probably what happened here. 10% NaCl refers to a solution of NaCl in water (aqueous solution) where 10% by weight is NaCl and the other 90% is water. For reference, ocean water contains around 3% and blood serum contains around 0.9%. So 10% is a fairly salty.