Corrected: (Sodium is not the same as sodium chloride)
0,1 grams Na+ in 1 liter water. This amount of sodium (Na+) is present in
0.1 (g Na+) * [ 58.45 (g/mol NaCl) / 22.99 (g/mol Na+) ] = 0.2542 g NaCl = 0.25 g/L
Dissolve 100 mg sodium chloride in 1 L demineralized water.
To make a 1.0 M solution of sodium cation using sodium chloride, you need to consider the molar mass of sodium chloride (58.44 g/mol). Since 1 mole of sodium chloride provides 1 mole of sodium cation, you would need 58.44 g of sodium chloride to make a 1.0 M solution in 100 ml.
100 g of the solution contains 11 g of sodium chloride
One mole solution of sodium chloride makes 1000 millimole. So 0.1 mole solution of sodium chloride will have 100 millimole in the solution.
The answer is: 0,9 g NaCl in 100 g solution.
Divide the amount of sodium chloride by the total amount (sodium chloride + water). Then multiply that by 100 to convert to percent.
This is a solution containing 100 mg NaCl/L.
Hayem's solution. This is an isotonic fluid which consists of the folIowing constituents (in g/100 ml):sodium chloride 0.5, sodium sulphate 2.5 and mercuric chloride 0.25. The sodium sulphate discourages clumping of the erythrocytes and the mercuric chloride is a preservative.
This is a water solution containing 5 g dextrose and 0,3 g sodium chloride in 100 mL.
The solute that creates a saltwater solution is sodium chloride (table salt). When dissolved in water, sodium chloride dissociates into sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-), which impart the salty taste to the solution.
To make a saturated solution of sodium chloride, simply add table salt (sodium chloride) to water at room temperature and stir until no more salt dissolves. The resulting solution will be saturated when additional salt no longer dissolves, indicating that the water is holding as much salt as it can at that temperature.
Hypernatremia is treated with infusions of a solution of water containing 0.9% sodium chloride (0.9 grams NaCl/100 ml water), which is the normal concentration of sodium chloride in the blood plasma